Or you can also think of masks like windows. The areas not being masked are the parts of the photo that show through, like a window lets light show through a wall. PaintShop Pro comes with several masks installed.
And you can download more free masks from the Welcome Book. To get more masks, open the Welcome Book, select Get More in the left menu and then click on the Creative Content tab. Scroll down to find the Creative Content Pack and download. Open an image in the PaintShop Pro Edit workspace. Click on the dropdown menu arrow to see the library of available masks. In this example we will choose the flower mask.
The black areas of the mask will end up covering the image. The white areas will allow the image to show through, producing the equivalent of a flower-shaped window. Leave the default options as they are and click Load. This is the result: the center of the photo is showing, and the background is blocked off, following the flower shape. For a photo that has the subject in the center, this mask is good for blocking parts of the background, highlighting the subject.
Look at the Layers palette and note the change of layer structure. The mask layer appears above the background layer, and both layers are placed inside a layer group.
Masks are always grouped with the layer that was active when the mask was created. Masks can also have shades of gray, enabling some of the image to show through.
This mask is white in the center, with black and shades of gray along the edges. Start by adding a new raster layer above the photo. Use the Flood Fill tool to paint the entire raster layer green. Since the green layer is active, the mask will be applied to the green layer, not the photo layer. Load the Edge Burst mask again.
This time, the center of the green layer is to be blocked, not the parts along the edges. This means that black should be in the center, white along the edges.
Click Invert Transparency to reverse the black and white pixels. The green layer remains atop the image as a frame, with some translucent areas, and the center of the image shows through. In addition to the masks available in PaintShop Pro, you can also use an image that you create or find yourself. In this example we have our original image open and a black and white spiral image.
Note : you can use a color image as mask as well, though PaintShop Pro will reduce it to grayscale when used for masking. In the Source window, select the spiral image. But use pins ONLY in the seam allowances. Cut the fabric using good fabric shears. Now we need to cut the second fabric piece the one without interfacing. You can cut it using the same mask template PDF as described above. But I prefer to make a mask with a removable filter for better protection so the cutting of the second piece of fabric is different in this case.
If you would like to make a mask with a removable filter, then we have to make an opening for the filter. Cut fabric along the line. Place these pieces of fabric side by side and cut the second piece for the mask using the pattern.
Now we need to make the opening smaller. For this I iron-on small pieces of interfacing like you see in the images below and make a few zigzag stitches over it.
Press the stitches so it looks nice. Cut seam allowances close to stitches. Cut the corners close to stitches. Now use the second pattern piece. Place it on the fabric like you see in the images below and fold both edges inside. Make sure the folded parts are equal. Press with a hot iron. From now on the steps will be different for my 2 models of DIY masks. If you make the mask like this with elastic over your head for the first time you may not have the right measurements for this elastic.
You can always adjust it later. Just cut it a little bigger and later you will shorten it. As for my elastic, the bigger piece that goes over my head is 15 inches long, and the shorter piece that goes around the neck is 10 inches. But the elastic you are using can have different elasticity. So the measurements will be different for different elastic. Place elastic edges under the folded fabric as you see in the images below and stitch around all edges.
Make sure the pleats are exactly the same. Stitch again over the pleats. Recorded Webinar This video explores the essential, must know concepts and simple techniques to enable any level professional to better utilize their existing software and hardware resources including the use of Imagenomic products.
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