Type Masks: Setting an Image in Type

So far in this chapter, you've been reading about how to create regular type and how to glam it up by applying Layer styles and effects. But in Elements, you can also create type by filling letters with the contents of a photo, as shown in Figure 13-11. (You'll find gourds.jpg, the photo used as the basis for Figure 13-11 and Figure 13-13, on the "Missing CD" page at www.missingmanuals.com.)

By using the Type Mask tools, you can create type that's made from an image. You can also use the Type Mask tools to emboss type into your photo. See Figure 13-13.

Figure 13-11. By using the Type Mask tools, you can create type that's made from an image. You can also use the Type Mask tools to emboss type into your photo. See Figure 13-13.

The Type Mask tools work by making a selection the shape of your letters. Essentially, you're creating a kind of stencil that you'll place on top of your image.

Once you've used the Type Mask to create your text-shaped selections, you can perform all sorts of neat modifications to your text. You can emboss type into your image (which makes it looks like it's been stamped into your image); you can apply a stroke to the outline of your text (useful if your font doesn't have a built-in outline option); or you can copy and move your text to another document entirely.

Using the Type Mask Tools

Working with the Type Mask tools is pretty easy. The following steps show you how to create a Type Mask and lay it over an image so that the letters you create are filled with whatever's in your image: ...

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