Hello Friends!

I wanted to highlight this digital scrapbooking tutorial from Chelle’s website. It works for alphas that are nearly black and white, like Jump Zone or Movie Night or even Fire Alpha.  If you use the tip at the bottom of this tutorial will work with the alphas in Boho Summer or Liberty. Start with one of the letters in the alpha. You can do all the letters at once if you flatten them to one layer (but not if they overlap…then just repeat this for every letter)


Add your favorite paper on the layer above and group the two together. (Ctrl-G or alt click when you mouse over the crack between them in your layers palette)

Now change the blending mode to lighten. (This won’t work for papers darker than the black of the letter, nor papers lighter than the white of the border…but stay tuned I have a tip for those borderline papers)

TA DA!
Here’s another twist to make it even more versatile…what if you don’t want white around the edge, what if black would suit your needs better. Go back to just the letter, but this time the first step is to invert the letter. Invert is found under Image or just use Ctrl-I. Now the alpha is white (kinda grey) with a black edge.

Add your favorite paper and clip, this time choosing darken as the blending mode:

If you look closely, some of the grey of the alpha is showing through. So here’s the extra tip (it works for those borderline papers too.) Use the levels command (ctrl-L with the alpha layer chosen) to adjust the original alpha. If you are working with the black version, move the far left slider (the black one) to the right. If you are working with the white version — like we are here–then move the far right slider to the left.

It’ll take out the light grey leaving our alpha perfectly aqua.

Here are some ideas from the Creative Team. Jenn J (jmljensen) provided this layout and instructions of what she did. She used Aviator, Liberty {alpha} and Teacher’s Pet. She recolored the alpha and Teacher’s Pet wordstrips by clipping a dark gray paper from the Aviator kit to each letter/wordstrip then changed the blend mode of the paper to lighten. Cool huh?

Jenn J

cc_teacherspet   cc_aviator   cc_liberty_ap

Go ahead. Try it. You’ll be surprised how easy it is.
by-Sari