(Screenshots Photoshop CS but
will be similar in all versions).
You will learn: Working with
different blending modes
Working with adjustment layers
The beginning of any scrapbook page is always your
background paper – why not have fun and try making some which are
uniquely yours, and have a lot of fun in the process?
Step 1.
I keep a file of photos which I have specifically
taken as texture photos - clothing, carpets, metals, woods, or
“failure photos” those which a blurred, anything with interesting
texture. These I keep in a “texture” folder in My Documents.
For this activity try Files Texture01 & Texture02 - They are located in the All Modules Folder\ Digital Scrapbooking\ Tutorial & Activity Files - FOLDER
This background I started by opening one of these, cropping to a
square & resizing to 12” x 12”. This became my background layer.
I then duplicated it, you don’t have to but I just don’t like
working on a background layer.

Step 2
Above this create a new adjustment layer –
an adjustment layer affects all layers beneath it – the joy of
adjustment layers is that they are non-destructive – if you don’t
like what you have done, at any stage you can go back & modify
or delete the adjustment layer, because you are NOT working on, or
in any way changing the layer itself.
The adjustment layer button is 4th from the left in
the layers palette; it’s a circle, half black, half
white.
Click on this & it will give you a menu, for
this example, I chose a very simple one - Brightness / Contrast – I
just lightened it a bit, & reduced the contrast – you can choose
any you’d like.

Step 3
Now create a new layer & label it
gradient – you can choose any colours you like, for my example I
used the “copper” gradient, one which is in the default set. You may
choose any of the gradient styles – I chose the linier gradient -
see screenshot to the left.
Bye the way - I hope you are saving your work at
each step, you don’t want to loose your masterpiece!
This gradient I pulled from top to bottom, but why
don’t you try left to right or corner to corner? Or a different
gradient?

Step 4.
No go to the blending modes drop down in
your Layers palette – the first is “normal” – choose this, leave it
highlighted blue & you can cycle through the various modes
seeing what effect they have on your work.

Step 5.
Now keep adding layer upon layer, try
solid colours, brushed layers, with adjustment layers, and altering
the blending modes till you come up with something that you like –
don’t be afraid, just keep on adding. Below is a screenshot of the
background I ended up with – a nice blue paper very different from
what I started with. If you’d like more papers of different colours
just add a new hue/saturation adjustment layer on top.
Just keep
playing and have fun!

These backgrounds I used for my Winter Wonderland
Kit available in the store at DSP.

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