One way to create precise gallery-wraps
Posted: August 17th, 2013, 3:46 pm
Recently I had a request from family to print 5 of my images on canvas.
I let them make at a local photographer who has the equipment for canvas printing and mounting.
I wanted my pictures to be print with gallery-wraps because they are tight in composition and have no room to waste some area to wrap around th frame.
For those who don't know, gallery wrap is a small strip added to all sides of the originall image, just the mirrored strip according to that side.
So the image flows seamingless around the corner of the frame.
The images should have a size of rougly 80 by 50 cm, so I decided to make them 30 by 20 inches, which are exactly 762 by 508 mm. close enough at the given aspect ratio of my images at 3:2.
According to my printer the image should have 150 ppi at that size and the wrap should be about 40 mm, 1.5 inches are 38 mm, so, just fine.
First I tried to make a white border and fill in the strips with Composite, but with 4 strips at each of the 5 images positioning the strips pixel-exact is kind of a pain, so I came to the following method:
1. Resizing the image to the desired size and resolution, 30 by 20 inches at 150 ppi give 4500 by 3000 pixel.
2. Making the left and right wrap-strip: Crop/Add Border - Margins Left = 0 and Right = 4500 - 225 = 4275 (225 pixel = 1.5 Inches at 150 ppi) -> Apply
The second strip is just the opposite - Left Margin = 4275, Right Margin = 0 . Now we have 2 strips 225 px wide by 3000 px high.
3. Mirroring the strips at the vertical axis - Mirror/Rotate - The "Mirror" button (with the horizontal arrows).
4. Open Layout - Creating a page with the size 4500 + 225 + 225 = 4950 by 3000 pixels (the image width plus the width of the 2 strips).
The 3000 pixel stay as they are for now, the top and bottom strip will be added later to the now to create image, the corners between the strips would be blank if we would add then now already.
Set the Snap grid in Layout to a useable value, 5 pixel is just fine in my case as al sizes are devideable by 5.
Now create 3 panels, with the following Panel Size and Lower Left Corner:
1st Panel 4500 x 3000 px, LLC 225 x 0 (for the main image),
2nd Panel 225 x 3000 px, LLC 0x0 (the left strip)
3rd Panel 225 x 3000 px, LLC 4725x0 (the right strip)
After all that math now comes the easy part: Just fill the panels with the corresponding images and they are all alligned perfectly pixel precise.
OK in Layout creates a new image 4950 by 3000 pixel.
From this image now we create the top and bottom strip just with the same method described, 4950 px wide, 225 px high , one with Top Margin = 3000 - 225 = 2775, the other with the Bottomn Margin = 2775.
The strips need to be fliped then (mirroring on the horizontal axis) and the Layout is created correspondently with the strip-panels up and down the main panel.
It needs a bit of thinking and calculating in the first steps, but when the layout files are saved they can be used over and over again, just crop and mirror the 2 stris each and put them in the layout, and the galery wrap is done.
Hope it helps the one or the other!
I let them make at a local photographer who has the equipment for canvas printing and mounting.
I wanted my pictures to be print with gallery-wraps because they are tight in composition and have no room to waste some area to wrap around th frame.
For those who don't know, gallery wrap is a small strip added to all sides of the originall image, just the mirrored strip according to that side.
So the image flows seamingless around the corner of the frame.
The images should have a size of rougly 80 by 50 cm, so I decided to make them 30 by 20 inches, which are exactly 762 by 508 mm. close enough at the given aspect ratio of my images at 3:2.
According to my printer the image should have 150 ppi at that size and the wrap should be about 40 mm, 1.5 inches are 38 mm, so, just fine.
First I tried to make a white border and fill in the strips with Composite, but with 4 strips at each of the 5 images positioning the strips pixel-exact is kind of a pain, so I came to the following method:
1. Resizing the image to the desired size and resolution, 30 by 20 inches at 150 ppi give 4500 by 3000 pixel.
2. Making the left and right wrap-strip: Crop/Add Border - Margins Left = 0 and Right = 4500 - 225 = 4275 (225 pixel = 1.5 Inches at 150 ppi) -> Apply
The second strip is just the opposite - Left Margin = 4275, Right Margin = 0 . Now we have 2 strips 225 px wide by 3000 px high.
3. Mirroring the strips at the vertical axis - Mirror/Rotate - The "Mirror" button (with the horizontal arrows).
4. Open Layout - Creating a page with the size 4500 + 225 + 225 = 4950 by 3000 pixels (the image width plus the width of the 2 strips).
The 3000 pixel stay as they are for now, the top and bottom strip will be added later to the now to create image, the corners between the strips would be blank if we would add then now already.
Set the Snap grid in Layout to a useable value, 5 pixel is just fine in my case as al sizes are devideable by 5.
Now create 3 panels, with the following Panel Size and Lower Left Corner:
1st Panel 4500 x 3000 px, LLC 225 x 0 (for the main image),
2nd Panel 225 x 3000 px, LLC 0x0 (the left strip)
3rd Panel 225 x 3000 px, LLC 4725x0 (the right strip)
After all that math now comes the easy part: Just fill the panels with the corresponding images and they are all alligned perfectly pixel precise.
OK in Layout creates a new image 4950 by 3000 pixel.
From this image now we create the top and bottom strip just with the same method described, 4950 px wide, 225 px high , one with Top Margin = 3000 - 225 = 2775, the other with the Bottomn Margin = 2775.
The strips need to be fliped then (mirroring on the horizontal axis) and the Layout is created correspondently with the strip-panels up and down the main panel.
It needs a bit of thinking and calculating in the first steps, but when the layout files are saved they can be used over and over again, just crop and mirror the 2 stris each and put them in the layout, and the galery wrap is done.
Hope it helps the one or the other!