> but the BEST tool for it is the Pen Tool, which takes a bit of practice but the results are worth it...
Sounds tedious, though. If one already has a graphic with transparency, it seems to me that a "draw clipping path at opaque/transparent boundries" tool would be very handy, but what do I know? ;-)
> Resolution for outside printing should be 300dpi...
Thank you for that tip. I had been wondering what resolution to use when sending something out (I have to start specifying resolution very early in the process - in PageMaker's document settings). I know the resolution of my printers, but I have had to think of print shops as a wildcard.
> you cannot get vector graphics out of PSP - it is a raster-based program.
It's not that simple - you can build both raster and vector layers in PSP, and they are maintained as such. You can also save the graphics as a Photoshop file (*.psd), and when I did that on a vector-based logo with a fair amount of complexity, the resulting PSD file was only 96KB, so I think at least in that format it is outputing the data as vector (the canvas I was working on was 1120x598 pixels - I'm pretty sure it can't render that much raster data in 96KB). It can save in about 20 other file formats as well - most I'm sure are raster, but a few I don't know.
After experimenting with saving as PSD, I discovered that I have a copy of Photoshop Elements on my PC (file properties lists the version as 1.0.128.0), but it's asking for a serial number before it will let me use it. It probably came with some other program, but I have no idea which one. Some possiblities are: Adobe Premiere 6.5, PageMaker 7.0, DVDit! PE, or the computer itself, a Sony VAIO PCV-RX55 designed for video and came with a bunch of bundled software (I doubt that Office 2000 Premium or PaintShop Pro would bundle it - Adobe is the competition!). Anyone know whether any of the above list might be the source of my Elements installation? I can't find a mention of it in any of the above software's manuals. And does anyone know if it can do the clipping path thing? (I don't know what "clipping path" is called in Japanese, so it will be hard to look for in the User's Guide.)