either way blur is necessary from my point of view - but I have not tried this in CS4..
either way blur is necessary from my point of view - but I have not tried this in CS4..
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Nothing lasts forever...
Thank you so very much for your help. I'm so unskilled in Adobe and felt so 'useless'. I've worked with Corel since 1989 and shiver everytime I have to use Adobe... but for my work it is necessary to keep in 'sync' with the printer I do work for so I've installed Adobe so I could use the file(s) they send me. I usually convert to Corel app but this one job I could not figure out with Corel. I'm only as far as CS3 and don't see me doing an upgrade soon.
Thank you again so very much.
inphoenix
glad to help, and that you got it sorted
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Nothing lasts forever...
Just checked out your photo and wonder if there is anyway to remove the 'red' from the halo. I found I could not get a really white white halo. Mine was so grey... (gray) hahaha
if you cant remove the red, it is probably because your screen has a cast of red through it. This means you have to adjust your monitor. And a white halo is easy.
With your truck on a transparent background, hold down Ctrl and click on the image thumbnail of the layer, this will select the pixels in the layer.
Make a new layer and make sure that layer is selected. Then fill the layer with white. Place the layer behind the truck layer and then apply gaussian blur.
White halo. Btw, if you have it on a black background, the halo will ofc appear grey since the blur is creating a blend between white (solid) and transparent. So with the black there, it appears grey lol.
If you want there to be white then the blur, you can expand the selection before bluring it to create white pixels outside the border of the truck.
Illustrator doesn't control me....I control the beast within
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Nothing lasts forever...
or that :P
Illustrator doesn't control me....I control the beast within
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