tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8486538433019653597.post7000625687960281355..comments2023-09-10T03:20:34.929-08:00Comments on Who Knew? geezee: PaperUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8486538433019653597.post-78912101835250136762009-03-01T22:57:00.000-09:002009-03-01T22:57:00.000-09:00A couple of things I'd add....I never unlock my ba...A couple of things I'd add....<BR/><BR/>I never unlock my background. I always create a square and on the page, and make it the size of the page, and use that as a background. My reason for doing this is that background piece can never be re-sized. For example, if you do a layout in 12 x 12 and decide you actually want to print it at 8 x 8 ... you unlock all your elements and papers, click 'select all' then 'group' and you can resize the whole thing at once to 8 x 8. BUT that background page won't resize. So I have learned (the hard way) just to leave it white, and leave it locked, and build my papers by starting with a square from the shapes menu. Did that make any sense?<BR/><BR/>Also, you can colour sample from a photo that is not on your page, as long as the photo is showing along the right. You can also colour sample from elements or papers or pages you have already done, as long as they are showing on the right. You can colour sample from anythign that is visibile when you click 'sample'<BR/><BR/><BR/>And about adding your overlays to your surfaces file of the program ... I do it a different way. I don't add it to the program files at all (that's scary and makes the program bulky to load) I just add a collection to 'My Stuff' of all my overlays. then I pull them on to the page and play wit opacity, size, shadows, etc. I have gigs and gigs of overlays (I am an overlay addict) and it would seriously slow down my program to put them all in the program file. <BR/><BR/>And finally - I would encourage you to play with the gradient settings on your papers sometimes if you haven't already. You can do a 2 colour gradient, with very slightly different colours, and it just gives your page some dimension (in addition to whatever overlays you are using). And a 2 colour gradient with totally different colours (say, purple and pink) can be quite stunning.Jewelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07099960361272587571noreply@blogger.com