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Image Morphing - Adobe Flash Tips
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Hi Guys! It is good time to tell visitors and Adobe Flash learners a great tip of Adobe Flash. Most of the time you have seen a image and text morphing in movies, serials and advertisements. Here we will discuss about it and tell you how can you create it by yourself. So get start from here:-

  1. Start a new movie [CTRL+N]. Modify the size of your movie (Modify>Movie) to 150x150 pixels.
  2. Enter any text on your main movie by clicking on the Text Tool Button . I used a Times New Roman font on this example and font size = 150. Use your mouse or your keyboard arrow to center the text.
  3. While the text is highlighted, break it apart by pressing [CTRL+B] or (Modify>Break Apart)
  4. Right-click your mouse on Frame 20 and insert a Blank Keyframe. Your animation will start from Frame 1 and will end at Frame 20.
  5. Enter any text at Frame 20 by using the Text Tool Button . Break apart the new text by pressing [CTRL+B]
  6. Double-click your mouse at Frame 1 to activate the Frame Properties window. Follow the same settings as shown below.
    Your timeline should appear like the one shown on the left.
  7. For more complex shape changes, Macromedia Flash has a Shape Hint where you can mark starting and ending points.
    To do this, click on Frame 1 then press [CTRL+H] to add a shape hint and move the shape hint (see example) to the point you want to mark.
  8. Go to the last keyframe (Frame 20) and move the shape hint that corresponds to the first point you have marked.
  9. Go to Frame 1 and add another shape hint [CTRL+H] as shown at the left image.

    Go the last frame and move the shape hint "b" as shown below.
  10. Preview your animation by pressing [Enter] and start noticing the difference :)


Resource :- http://www.pinoy7.com
posted by Draven @ 4:22 AM   0 comments
Creating a Custom Drop Shadow
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
THIS IS A SIMPLE WALK-THROUGH for producing drop shadows by hand. In some cases you'll want to know and understand this process because you'll need a shadow that does not "drop" from the entire object, or one that you can manipulate as a separate object rather than part of the layer as in the Drop-Shadow layer effect.

This is an object, rastered on its own layer.


The first thing we'll do is duplicate that object to another new layer.
* Drag the layer to the "New Layer" icon at the bottom of the layers palette, or,
* Use the "Float" command: Command/J, or Control/J for Windows.

Next: Select the layer original object layer
* Command/click the layer thumbnail (Control/Click for Windows)


Now your object is selected on the bottom layer.
Tap the letter D to change colors to default
Tap Option/Delete (Alt/Delete for Windows) to fill the object
(Racing ants, the dotted line around the object signifies it is selected)

In this capture, you'll see the object is now filled with the foreground color (Black) even though you can't see it because it's behind (or beneath) the White object on the next layer.


Tap Command/D (Control/D) to drop any selections Choose: Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur and in the resulting dialog box, set the amount of blur to result in the desired amount of shadow.


Here, we've created the blur than selected the Move tool (Tap V) to "nudge" the shadow to its new location. (In this example, we went 12 pixels right, and 12 pixels down. Your own project may be different. )

NOTE You've completed the drop shadow just as the Layer Effects would have. We've actually been doing this for years-- even long before Photoshop had layers!

However, you now own the shadow as a separate object and can act upon it as you wish. For instance, perhaps the shadow needs to run across multiple surfaces...

Resource :- http://www.photoshop911.com
posted by Draven @ 4:06 AM   0 comments
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The motto of the blog is to share tips and tricks on windows, browsers and most commonly used softwares in between the users. We will not provide any information which can harmful to other users. All tips and tweaks are your own risk we will be not responsible for that.
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