Supply List

Creating Your First Page
in Photoshop
This tutorial will guide you through the basics of making your first digital scrapbooking layout. This lesson is recommended for people who are new to digital scrapbooking or those who are switching to Photoshop from another program. It works for Photoshop 7.0 and above, though your windows may look slightly different. You will be learning about layers, adding items to a page, resizing them and moving them around, making borders, and the text settings.

Special notes about our tutorials: The red text indicates a choice from the main menu (at the top). In addition, (gray text) indicates a Windows shortcut key.Learning shortcut keys is totally optional, but highly recommended. Mac users substitute command for ctrl and option for alt to learn these shortcuts. I use photographs from clipart.com to illustrate my tutorials. Our tutorials are copyrighted, but if you have your own site, you may link to this page.

Step 1
Open Photoshop. We’re going to create our document: File>>New (Ctrl-N). A window with options will appear.
Choose 8.5 inches for the width, 11 inches for the height, and 300 pixels/inch for the resolution. Color Mode should be RGB, and background contents should be Transparent. Click OK.


Step 2
Next, we’re going to add our background paper. I used the beige solid freebie from the Fly High kit here at Atomic Cupcake.
Open your paper: File>>Open (Ctrl o). Select the whole thing Select>>All (Ctrl a), then copy it: Edit>>Copy (ctrl c). Close the background paper: File>>Close (ctrl-w), then paste it your new page: Edit>>Paste (ctrl v).
It doesn't matter that our paper is larger than our page, since photoshop only shows us as much as will fit. We can move the paper around to change what's showing by using the move tool (the top right tool in the tool pallette) (v).


Step 3
Let's set the move tool options. Select the move tool (the top right tool in the tool pallette) (v). Across the top of Photoshop, under the menu, is a line full of options. Uncheck "Auto Select Layer". This keeps us from accidentally moving the wrong layers later on. Check "Show Bounding Box". This lets us use the move tool as a transfom tool later.


Step 4
Next, we're going to add a photograph. We do this the same way we added the background. Open your photo: file>>open (ctrl o). Select it: select>>all (ctrl a). Copy it: edit>>copy (ctrl c). Close your photo: File>>Close (ctrl w), then paste into it your new page: Edit>>Paste (ctrl v).


Step 5
We have two layers now, so we should take a minute to learn about layers.
Layers work a lot like items in a traditional scrapbooking page. If I were making this page with physical supplies, I would have two seperate items on the table right now. I could move the paper on top of the photo to cover it, or move the photo around on top of the paper. While beginners tend to think of Photoshop as working like a single sheet of drawing paper, it's much easier to think of it as a scrapbook page that hasn't been glued together yet.
In our layers pallette, Layer 2 (our photo) is the current layer. If your layers pallette is not showing on your screen, open it: windows>>layers (f7). You should always leave this window open while scrapping.


©2005-2010 Atomic Cupcake, a Blabbermouth Media site
dedicated to provided high quality printable graphics, page kits, clip art, and photoshop actions
for scrapbooking, digital scrapbooking and computer crafting


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