Magnify Glass
Tricking the eyes into thinking they are seeing something
they're not is sometimes an easy task. This is how it is for creating a
magnifying glass, or at least the appearance of one. We can create 2d images
that have depth by simply making some of the elements of the image smaller than
other and placing them higher on the image we're creating as shown in the layers
tutorial.
For the magnifying glass we need to make text look closer and
farther away at the same time and we need it to appear to be seen through
something else - glass.
As usual I started with a 300x300 image and added a layer. I
then used the line tool to create my piece of paper. I added a little gray down
the center of my curl and used the smudge tool to give it a highlight type
effect. (Not a great rendering and not the point of this tutorial.) I used the
magic wand tool and selected my canvas, then inverted the selection. I added a
new layer and placed it under my paper layer. I then added a drop shadow.
Next item is to create a new layer and using the shapes tool
(make sure the vector shapes box is not checked) with a stoked circle and a line
width of 5, create the round part of our magnifying glass. Add a new layer and
create a filled rounded rectangle to make the handle for the glass. When you
make the handle you will have to rotate the layer to get it where mine is. I
rotated it 45 degrees. I then used the move tool to place it so that it appeared
attached to the circle part.
I then turned off all the layers but the layer with the
handle and the layer with the circle. From the Layers menu I clicked on Merge
and then "Merge Visible". Be sure not to "Merge all". Now my
handle and my circle are on the same layer. I then turned all my layers on
again.
I'll need to have some "glass" so I used the magic
wand on the layer with the handle and circle and selected the area inside
the circle. I then created a new layer and used the flood fill/paint bucket
tool set to a sunburst gradient with the metallic gradient.
I then used a plugin I have that created the highlight on
another new layer.
Now, using the transparency slider on the layer palette I
reduced the opacity until I could see my paper through it.
I then added a new layer and placed text on the new layer. I
moved that layer beneath the glass layer. I looked to see where the text fit
"under" the glass and redid the text on another layer. This time
however, I started my text lines at size 14. I then highlighted the areas that
would fall under the glass and increased the size of that part of the text to
size 20. I deleted the first text layer I created. Below are the layers I ended
up with.
Below is the image I ended up with. This was a pretty
simplified tutorial and you could get into a lot more detail with the glass.
For instance you could do a lot more work with shading on the glass part to
give it a more rounded effect.
There are a lot of things you can do that at first seem
like un-surmountable tasks which really turn out to be fairly simple.
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