Glass Mask Please read my Terms of Service, thank you! This site is designed, created and maintained by Suzy-Q. All page backgrounds and images are created exclusively for @Sunshine Suzy-Q formerly ©Texas Patches Art Studio, and they may NOT be downloaded or used elsewhere. This tutorial is my own creation, any similarities to any other tutorial is strictly unintentional. ©SunshineSuzyQ.com Things you will need for this tutorial: Eye Candy (Glass)(demo) This picture I'm using in the above sample was taken by me, in a park in Alaska. You have my permission to use it, please leave my name intact and it has been watermarked. Can you just imagine how beautiful it was to actually walk down this lane? My Mask Text of this tut for print out This Tutorial is written in PSP8 1. Open the graphic, shift duplicate then close the original. Shift duplicate and minimize one. 2. Working on one of the duplicates, go to layers, load mask, load the SQornate mask. It will delete the picture, so don't worry. Delete the mask and apply an inner bevel using these settings or your favorite setting.  (w) 4 (s) 20 (d) 4 (a) 0 (s) 13 (a) 315 (i) 50 (e) 30) 3. Open your other duplicated image. Copy and paste your masked image as a new layer to the top of this image. Weird looking isn't it? I thought it looked so kewl, and I tried several looks with it. The one from above was made by adding a drop shadow of H & V both 2, opacity was 64, blur was 4. Then I applied Eye Candy Glass with these settings. (bw) 14.40 (s) 75 (ed) 30 (gs) 35 (r) 50 (o) 0 (t) 50 glass color white 4. I then duplicated this masked layer, merged all flatten. I didn't do anything else with this particular picture. However you can go on and add borders, just whatever your imagination wants. I just wanted to highlight my daughter's Rhodesian Ridgeback. Here are some more samples. Hope you enjoyed this tutorial. Any questions, email me please. Please stop by and pick up your Thank You for doing my tutorial.