designing a site that is to be 760 width. It will have a 1px border around it which will be made by html for the table. My questions is do you have the canvas be 758 width and design in that or do you design with a 760 width and draw the tables in the design and just not include it in the slices?
I would like to add more to the white background to make it bigger without having to stretch it and distort the image.
I want to place a circle shaped outline border around the original image with a set border thickness and color and be able to crop/remove the portion of the image beyond the outline, changing it from a square/rectangle image to a circular image.
If I am not able to change the drawing to have a round outer border from square, how can I make the outer parts past the newly created circular outline transparent?
I want to make a border for something. The border is basically a christmas light border around some text. What I did was I took a picture of one lightbulb and edited it so that I just got the lightbulb (no background or anything...). What I want to do is basically create a border from that single light bulb by alternating the colors of the bulb (like how you can with a brush). Can I create a new brush out of that light bulb? I coulda sworn I've done it before, and there was a lesson on brushes in the book... But I can't figure out how. Or maybe theres a way to get around it by doing a some sort of border?
When I try to add a border to a picture, everything goes fine until I try to fill it. Fill command fills it with a solid colour that becomes more transparent as it nears the center of the picture. Same thing happens with paint bucket tool and brush tool. Anyone know what I can do to fix this?
Just seeing CS6 for the first time and trying to warm up to it. There were several annoyances I have been able to revert back to normal, but this one thing I can't seem to make go away.  The marquee crosshair used to be displayed with 1 pixel lines, now it has a 1px border around the entire crosshair when it is over a dark color. Is there a way to get rid of that border? It just feels a little cumbersome, and sort of annoys me. I would rather it not be there.
I have created a web template that has a white backgrond, and will be forming a site that will have a white background.
What is the easiest way for me to put a border around my template in photoshop before I export it?.. ie i would like to have a thin black or grey border.
i have this border i made, a line weach consists from a number of colors, when i want to place it around a straight line shape i have no problem and all i need to do is to copy and paste and "free trasform" it acording to the angle of the shape. the problem is with a round shape, is there a way to control this line and make it round?
I use photoshop a lot and have a recurring issue... I often have to edit photos and images which invole me being zoomed in to 300-400%. When zoomed in this far I cannot work out how to view the edges of the document (if Im trying to draw a path or something around an object and the path needs to go out side the bordering edge then come back in) is there a way to do this? I can do it by zooming out, dragging the border box to be larger than the image , but can't seem to do it whilst zoomed in. which is a right pain in the rs.
I resize and image, Photoshop "brightens" the borders, Why? I would like to just shrink an image, but it adds a one pixel border to the image that is lighter in color than all the pixels next to it making it blatantly obvious that its there. What could that conceivably be useful for, and how do I resize an image without it doing this?
I design web pages on occasion and it almost always comes up that I need some border art for effects. What I mean by that is not necessarily a full square frame, but more like decorative separators to go between paragraphs, or to set off a footer. Know what I mean?
I'm not creative enough to design the little things myself, but I also have not been able to find any sources for them, short of just stealing one off another page, which I don't want to do. Sorry I don't have an example right now, if I come across one, I'll post it back here.
I hope I explained it enough. Suppose you went to a really elegant web site, you might find them using a fancy little curly brace thing between paragraphs or something. Know what I mean? I'm trying to find a source for such little candy graphics.
I've seen a lot of design work such as the piece below using a rough "torn" border.
I'd also like to learn a bit about the ornamentation around the title and artist name. You know the gold foil looking stuff. I imagine they pulled it off of a belt buckle or something and then filled it accordingly.
I've created a graphic in photoshop, used the Save for Web function (to a gif), and got a thin black border around the resulting image... which I don't want. The image is meant to integrate onto a web page with a white background without showing the borders of the image.
I've inferred that this box around the image is the bounding box. In print with preview, the preview shows the box. If you check off the "show bounding box" option, the box disappears and the print preview image looks the way I want my gif to look.
Even with a completely image-free psd file, it defaults to putting this box around the canvas.
I find it hard to believe that you can't create a border-free gif in photoshop, but I don't seem to be able to figure out how to turn it off.