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Step 5.
Choose the Move Tool (the black arrow) and Click-Drag the Animal Medicine Man over onto the Sandstone window.
He will be free floating on his own Layer, so you can easily place him in the center of the Sandstone.
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Step 6.
Up in the Options Bar and over to the right, you will see several File Tabs. One of them should say Layer Styles. Click-Drag it out on to the desktop. Choose Inner Shadow in the drop down menu, and then Noisy (the upper left hand box).
Your petroglyph will magically etch itself into the rock.
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| If you are using PhotoShop, it works a little differently. Choose Layer Syle from the Layer Menu, and then choose Inner Shadow. When the window opens, set the Distance to 5 and move the Noise Slider to 13. You should have the same result. |
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Step 7.
At this point, you may want to intensify the overall color of the image.
If so, first choose Flatten Image from the drop-down menu on your Layers Palette. If that palette isn't open, Click-Drag it from the File Tabs onto the desktop. Both Layers of your file are now combined into one.
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Step 8.
Now, we want to make a copy of our one Layer in order to intensify our colors.
Choose New/Layer Via Copy under the Layer Menu.
In PhotoShop, you just hold down the Control Key (Command on Mac) and type J to do the same thing.
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Step 9.
Click where you see the word Normal on the Layers Palette and you will find the drop down Blending Modes menu.
Choose Multiply, and you will notice that all the colors are intensified - probably too intensified, in fact.
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Step 10.
Also in the Layers Palette is the Opacity Slider. Click-Drag it back to about 50% and your image should be just right.
As we said, your image will be smaller and more blurry than ours, because you are working with low-res practice files. When you work with high-res files, you will love the printed result!
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