I need a program on which I can create a mockup of commercial wrapping paper. By that I mean something that will accommodate the huge (like 23x40) size of the average sheet of wrapping paper.
Can Photoshop do this? I don't even have the program yet . . because I need to find out if Photoshop is the best program to do it in.
how to "wrap around" an image into another image? What I'm doing is I have an image of a vitamin bottle, and I have designed a label for it, so what I need to do is to "paste" this label on the bottle digitally so it would look as if the label is really glued to the bottle.
Is there a special technique in Photoshop to do this? Not sure if it is the filter called Displace then use Wrap Around?
I wanted to make it look like it is on a can or something similar, how would I correctly warp it? I can't get accurate enough results using displace or liquify, is there any way that involves tracing the actual curve of the can image?
way then using the text wrap thingy to wrap text around a object? cause the option that comes with the text tool to make it curve sucks. I want to wrap the text around the inside of a circular saw (theres a perfect white cirlce in the center of it)
I own a little web site and as I add new products right now the web designers have to make the images up.
Basically the images is of the mug slogan wrapped round the mug (see below)
now these guys are brilliant but I don't want to have to keep bothering them as they are busy doing other good work..
how I can do this myself, all images to go on the mugs are 1000x1000 but I can scale them down to whatever size I need... I've managed to work out how to do text but not graphics..
I am useing a Canon Pro 9000 MKII and when I try to print 11x14 paper, it will not alow custom paper size. The Canon printer driver does have custom size but it does not show up in printer settings.
explaining how to wrap a label around a cylinder. However when I try myself, I obtain an enormous 3D cylinder with my label glued on it and once I reduce the size of the cylinder to the desired size, my label is minuscule. Additionally, it takes me ages to rotate/scale the cylinder in the right way.
Why is the 3D cylinder provided by Photoshop so enormous ?
I'm a writer and what you see below was my first published article back in 1999, therefore I would like to have a good copy. As you can tell, the newspaper in the image is beat up and faded, so I thought I would chop up the JPG, lay it all out again in PS and fly in my text.
When I select text from WORD and paste it into a PS Text box, there are enormous gaps in between sentences. How I can fly my text into the re-done article so it looks exactly like the newspaper copy, except the text is crispy and clear-y.
Original newspaper article:
New layout:
Text - I tried to lay it out so it would sorta fit the format of the original article. FAIL
I'm trying to find a quick way to realistically wrap text onto the surface of this sphere, and initial experiments in CS2 with the Arc warp and some perspective finangling have proved below expectations.
I'm wondering if theres a way to wrap a pattern around certain shapes.. in this case above, wrapping a metal pattern around this worm-like wrap assembled in a circle(its a stand/base for a hologram)
how do I use the text tool to wrap text around an image. Just like any news site or editorial site where the text wraps around the image and there is padding added to the image so the text is not right up against the image.
I want to be able to control the wrapping and I know there must be a way with PS CS.
I'm been trying to "wrap" my brain around this but with no successful. Attached is a view of a layout I've made. I'm trying to wrap an image on the numbered sections so that when I fold it, it looks seemless.
I'm using version 7, I'm trying to create a curled paper effect then paste an image on the "paper". A couple of web sites suggested creating a rectangle then create a path or something like that and then using the pen tool and the "handles" manipulate the corners. I'm not sure if I have the terminology correct but the problem is that when I create the rectangle and go to add the path (the icon looks like a circle with handles on it) it's grayed out and can not be selected and manually creating a path with the pen tool doesn't work.
I am trying to create a paragraph of text & the text is not wrapping! I am creating a large text box, but the text just disappears when it reaches the right edge of the box. I know that I have been able to do it before, but now can't. I have closed program & reopened, but no luck.
When I print 11 x 17 paper on Epson R2880 in LR the image begins printing before the leading edge of the paper reaches the printerhead (not prininting borderless.) Only happens in LR and not PS. I am using the LR paper standards for borders.
I set wrapping to the big A-letter to "Above/Below" and save file.
After opening the wrapping is in "Straddle Text" mode...
I am working with columns of paragraph text and this thing makes me very angry, because I must re-set this objects' wrapping mode to compensate text flow-back.
I was checking out this tutorial on wrapping a bitmap around a sphere, and I downloaded the referenced filters. The filters did not seem to work. The spherical mould tool seems not to work for me either.
I couldn’t see any effect for any of the choices of the wrapping “at inserts” (don’t wrap/exterior/interior/both) while wrapping “at ends” is reflected directly on the drawing.
I'm attempting to use the "emboss" feature and wrapping the text to the surface of the part.
Attached is the example of the part I am working with. Also attached is the error message I receive after attempting the process. Is there another way to wrap the text about the surface of a "coiled" face?
I've been attempting to create a sphere with an Earth texture, for which I've made a custom appearance with a flattened picture of earth. Instead of wrapping to the sphere, however, the image is mirrored on both sides of the sphere and extremely distorted. I knew wrapping 2D geometry to a sphere was not strictly possible, but is there no way to pull it off with an image?
If not, would something like this be possible in 3DS max?
I get to the warpping effect it seams photoshop offers more grid points than the perspective tool of GIMP. Any alternative technique or tool to accomplish this effect?
What I am trying to accomplish is to cut and paste a section of nail and lay it over the knotted rope but with only 4 grid points this does not cut it.