One
of the classic Photoshop effects got easy in Photoshop CS2. Using the
new Warp feature, the Page Curl effect takes seconds instead of minutes!
Start
with a layered image. The top layer will have the corner turned back,
revealing the lower layer. In this sample, well use the cover of my
book Photoshop CS2 for Dummies and a title page below. (Those of you
who own the book may notice that the title page has been re-arranged,
both in content and position in the book.)
Make
sure the upper layer is active in the Layers palette and make a square
select of the corner-to-be-curled by Shift-dragging the Rectangular
Marquee tool.
From Photoshop CS2s Edit> Transform menu, select Warp. (Earlier versions of Photoshop dont offer this feature.)
Youll
see a four-by-four grid appear over the selected area. You click
anywhere within the grid and drag to warp. In this case, you click on
the corner anchor point that you want to peel back and drag to the
center of the opposite square.
If
youve edited paths in Photoshop, you will recognize the direction
lines with their control points extending from the selected anchor
point. Drag the downward-pointing direction line until its directly
below the anchor point and aligned with the bottom of the grid.
Drag the other direction line until it extends horizontally from the anchor point and aligns with the side of the grid.
There
is your basic page curl! But lets give it a little depth. Using the
Polygon Lasso tool, make a selection of the triangular curl.
Use
the keyboard shortcut Command-Shift-J (Mac) or Control-Shift-J
(Windows) to move the selection to a new layer. Youll now have three
layers: The curl, the original layer from whcich it came, and the layer
being exposed.
Make
sure ther top layer is selected in the Layers palette. Click on the
second button at the bottom of the Layers palette and select Drop
Shadow, or choose Drop Shadow from the Layer> Layer Style menu. Use
the Spread slider to diffuse the shadow.
While
in the Layer Style dialog box, click on Color Overlay. (Click directly
on the name of the layer effect rather than on the checkbox.) Click on
the red color swatch to open the Color Picker and change the color to
Black by typing 0 in the R field and clicking OK. Reduce the opacity to
about 15%.
And heres the final product: