I'm going to start by placing a vector file I found at iStockPhoto onto the stage and sizing it accordingly. Although I could have created the container from scratch, the small cost of a stock piece like this far outweighs the time it would have taken to create by hand. I've rasterized the vector because it's a Rights Managed file and I can't go giving it away. If you want to pick this one up at iStock it's file ID is #5343602. In this case I was only worried about getting a container that would suit my style and labeling purposes and not so much about color.
12. Next select the 'PARENTAL' layer and go into blending options. Use these settings. After selecting OK, right click on your 'PARENTAL' layer (click directly to the right of the layer preview box) and click 'copy layer style'. Now right click on your 'ADVISORY' and 'EXPLICIT CONTENT' layer in the same spot and select 'paste layer style'. This will quickly apply the same layer style to all text layers without going into blending options for each one.
7. Now your label text and use the edit -> free transform tool to rotate it to fit the label shape and place it on to the label. Make sure the text layer is just above the label layer, then right click the text layer and choose rasterize type, then right click again, and choose merge down, so the label and text is in the same layer now.
Now duplicate your new Smart Object layer (Command/Ctrl-J) as many times as you need to fill one row of your template (we made two copies). Choose the Move tool (V), hold down the Shift key, and drag to the right, using the template as a guide to position the last copy in the top right-hand label frame. In the Layers palette, Command/Ctrl-click on all the other Smart Object layers to target them also and in the Options bar choose a horizontal distribu-tion to complete the row of labels. In this example we used "Distribute left edges," but any of the three horizontal choices will accomplish the same thing.
(For the small labels at the bottom of the sheet, choose the Type tool and type the fra-grance name and the company's phone number and url in the top left label space. Then turn this type layer into another Smart Object (Layer > Smart Objects > Group Into New Smart Object) so we can repeat it as we have for the main label. Make five duplicates of the Smart Object this time, distribute them, group them, and duplicate the group to make the second row.)
Hey This tutorial is all about creating and interesting and effective label which you can use to advertise parts of you website. For example you could place this above new content. To see the full image click. For this tutorial you will need photoshop or similar, and the Web 2.0 layers and gradients pack which you can download here. Step 1) Create your canvas, I suggest a large size so you create lots of detail, the final image can be scaled down later. Step 2) The next step is to draw your shape, this can be any shape. Use the preset shapes in Photoshop or download some new ones off the internet. It doesn't matter what colour it is. Step 3) Next apply a layer style to the shape, I recommend using the Web 2.0 layers and gradients pack, here. Although you can make your own. Step 4) As well as this I suggest using a bevel and emboss. Use are large size and reduce the opacity of the shadow. Step 5) Add you text. I've used Trebuchet MS. Use the character palette to move the letters into a good looking spacing. Step 6) Again, use one of the white layer styles in the pack and apply this to the white text. Step 7) You now have a cool looking Web 2.0 label to add to your web pages. Step 8) One optional step that I suggest adding is a drop shadow, this adds a lifted effect to the label. Step 9) Flatten and remove the background and save as a .png. This can now be added to any web page. The final label. As you can see it looks great on any web page.
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This article was written by Lauren Peone, Creative Director of laurendesigns. Lauren is an expert freelance graphic designer who has been in the design and fine art business for over 10 years. She has documented the design of a package label from start to finish (along with other helpful tips) in order to help other graphic designers.
In the old days (the 90s) of desktop labeling, a would-be label creator had two options: Microsoft Word or proprietary labeling software produced by the makers of ready-to-print label paper. Nowadays, however, choices are much more open. For one, the rise in popularity of OpenOffice (www.OpenOffice.org), a free yet highly capable Microsoft Office competitor, has forced label template suppliers like WorldLabel.com to look beyond the secular Microsoft enclave. The need for label design in high-end, professional-grade publishing applications like Adobe’s InDesign, PageMaker, FrameMaker, and Illustrator, as well as QuarkXPress and Corel Ventura, initially inspired the creation of label templates in Encapsulated PostScript (EPS), a vector-based graphic format that ruled the late-80s and entire 1990s but is rapidly falling into the remember-when realm of nostalgic technology. On the rise are label templates based on Adobe’s agile and ubiquitous Portable Document Format (PDF). Any creative application in the professional or “prosumer� (effectively, serious hobbyist) class can either or both read and create PDF files. More importantly, PDF files can be viewed and printed by anyone with a copy of the Adobe Reader�?which is to say, by just about every computer user on planet Earth. PDF-based labels can be printed on any inkjet or laser printer, or even sent to a printing shop.
Here's a way to design labels that you can then quickly modify for related products. Photoshop's Smart Objects, align-and-distribute options, and layer groups make it easy to repeat your label design to fit the label stock. by Linnea Dayton & Cristen Gillespie, authors of The Photoshop CS/ CS2 Wow! Book (Peachpit Press). This tutorial is supported by worldlabel.com.
8. With the edit -> free transform tool now drag the corners while holding down the ctrl key, this will give you control to drag the label in to a perspective view as shown below.
Buy. Download. Create. Get Photoshop CS3 now at the Adobe Store. For Photoshop CS and CS2 tutorials, see our Photoshop Tutorials Page. CD & DVD Labels - Photoshop CD Label Templates & Label Printing Tips By Pariah S. Burke
Designed By: dollipop Downloaded: 5852 times Description: 8 Poison label photoshop brushes. I don't require any credit or acknowledgment, though I appreciate it, and I would love to see what you do with them.
Create a new document 600�350 pixels with a background color of #232426. Select the rounded rectangle tool and create a box to the right of the canvas fill with the color #d2c79a.
This tutorial will demonstrate step by step how to create a label for your online products. In this case it shows you how to turn a bottle that doesn't have a label into a realistic product of your choice.
Choose Drop Shadow from the list on the left side of the Layer Style panel. Set the Opacity to 75%, the Distance to 3 px, the Spread to 14%, and the Size to 5px. Now choose Inner Shadow from the list and set the Blend Mode to Linear Dodge, the color to white, the Opacity to 81%, the Distance to 7 px, the Choke to 0%, and the Size to 13 px. Click on OK to apply the style. You have now completed making the transparent 3D text layer style.