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Symmetrical Flowerspage one |
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Older Tutorials Elements Tutorials |
I make it a habit
to always duplicate the background layer when editing an image, so thats
my first step, here. Grab the background layer in the Layers
palette, and drag it onto the New Layer button, or choose Duplicate
Layer from the Layers palette menu. If you use the latter method, simply
click OK in the Duplicate Layer dialog box that appears. Select the new, duplicate layer in the Layers palette and then choose the rectangular marquee tool in the toolbox. In the rectangular marquee tools options bar, make sure Feather is set to zero Drag a selection that crosses either the vertical center or horizontal center of the flower. You want this marquee to cross the center and include all the rest of that side of the image. Here, I considered using the vertical center.
However, I didnt like the way the selection split the petals both above and below the center. They would not line up well in the next step. So, I deselected (press Ctrl-D) and dragged a horizontal selection instead.
This selection splits the image in a much better spot. You can see that it cuts almost exactly across the petal on the left, and is nicely between the petals on the right. Also, it leaves all of the stamens (hope thats the right term for the things in the middle of the flower) within the selection which is nice since theyre interesting. You can reposition your selection while youre dragging it by pressing the spacebar (with the left mouse button still held down). If you dont get what you want on the first drag, deselect (press Ctrl-D) and try again. Once you have the selection right where you want it, press Ctrl-J, or choose Layer > New > Layer via Copy. Next, with the new, top, copied layer selected (dark blue) in the Layers palette, click on the little arrow in the upper right corner of the Layers palette and choose Duplicate Layer from the menu. Click OK in the dialog box that appears. Or drag the copied layer you just made onto the New Layer button at the bottom of the Layers palette. This will create a duplicate layer without the dialog box. This duplicate layer should be at the top of the Layers palette. With that duplicate layer selected, choose Image > Rotate > Flip Vertical. (Photoshop users, choose Edit > Transform > Flip Vertical.)
Note that if you are using your own image, and chose to use a vertical selection in the first step, rather than the horizontal one used here, you should choose Flip Horizontal here. Turn off visibility for all but the top two (copied) layers in the Layers palette. Do this by clicking on the eyeball icon at the left end of all layers below these two top layers. With the top layer selected in the Layers palette, choose the move tool in the toolbox. Press the Shift key, and drag straight down on your image to move the flipped layer into alignment with the layer below. Pressing the Shift key constrains your move to specific angles, in this case straight up or down. Use the zoom tool to magnify your image so you can see the edges clearly. With the move tool selected in the toolbox, you can use the arrow keys on your keyboard to move the layer one pixel at a time. Be sure and check at 100 % magnification after youve positioned the layer. Ive had cracks appear when I zoomed back out. To return your image to 100 % zoom, double-click on the zoom tools icon in the toolbox. Or type 100 in the text box at the left end of the status bar at the bottom of your screen and then press Enter. Your Layers palette should now look like this. Note that visibility is turned off for all but the top two layers. The cursor is pointing to the visibility icons box.
Select the top layer, named Second Copy in my illustration above, and press Ctrl-E, or choose Merge Down from the Layers palette menu. The first stage is complete. The image now looks as shown below. Not really very nice, so far, is it? The effect really doesnt kick in until the second flip which Ill show you next. continue of page two |
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Copyright © 2002 by Jay Arraich.
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