What it does
How to Install
Controls
Five Effects
Hints
Versions
How to Purchase
Questions |  |
SuperBladePro What it does SuperBladePro gives graphics a 3-D look by creating beveled edges and surface textures. The effects can be subtle or stark, raised or sunken. There are several kinds of bevels, textures, and mirrorlike reflections, and controls for light, gloss, iridescence, tarnish, glassiness, and more. It's a timesaving way to make touchable-looking text, buttons, and special effects. Super BladePro can use the preset files from the original BladePro. How to install Illustrated installation instructions are online.
To use this software, you need a paint program which accepts standard Photoshop 3.02 plugins.
Just put the plug-in filter into the folder where your paint program
expects to find it. If you have Photoshop, the folder is Photoshop:Plugins:Filters or Photoshop:Plug-ins. You must restart
Photoshop before it will notice the new plug-in. It will appear
in the menus as Filters->Flaming Pear->SuperBladePro. Most other paint programs follow a similar scheme.
If you have Paint Shop Pro: you have to create a new folder, put
the plug-in filter into it, and then tell PSP to look there.
PSP 7:
Choose the menu File-> Preferences-> File Locations... and choose the Plug-in Filters tab. Use one of the "Browse" buttons to choose the folder that contains the plug-in.
The plugin is now installed. To use it, open any image and select an area. From the menus, choose Effects->Plug-in Filters->Flaming Pear->SuperBladePro.
PSP 8, 9, and X:
Choose the menu File-> Preferences-> File Locations... In the dialog box that appears, choose Plug-ins from the list. Click "Add." If you are using PSP 8 or 9, click "Browse". Now choose the folder that contains the plug-in.
The plugin is now installed. To use it, open any image and select an area. From the menus, choose Effects->Plugins->Flaming Pear->SuperBladePro.
Controls When you invoke SuperBladePro, a dialog box will appear:

Quick start
| | | | Click the dice button a few times until you see something you like. Click OK. The progress bar will appear, and then your selection
will have a new 3-D look.
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Bring the filter back and take a look at the controls. On left
are a popup menu and several sliders.
Shape: Choose the shape of the bevel from this popup menu. Choose from
straight, curved, up-and-down, and doubled forms. The last shape
is a Gaussian bevel which produces a very smooth result at the
expense of some detail. Radius: The width, in pixels, of the beveled edge. Height: Larger values here make the bevel steeper. Positive values make the selection rise out of its background, and negative values make it sink in. Smoothness: Larger values reduce the rippled appearance of the bevel.
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dice 
bevel shapes | |
Texture specifies the strength of the texturing. Positive values make the texture rise out of the bevel, negative ones make it sink in. Embossing make the brightness of the underlying image influence the shape. Gloss controls shininess. Zero gives a chalky appearance. Higher numbers are glossier. Glare controls the size of the glossy highlight. Reflection controls how much the selection reflects the Environment graphic. If you don't want any reflection at all, use zero. Glassiness gives the selection a glassy appearance. The color of the original image becomes the color of the glass. Caustic For glassy selections, this slider controls the brightness of the caustic highlight that appears opposite the light source. The tiny square just to the right of the slider lets you choose prismatic or white caustics. Iridescence controls the strength of iridescent coloration. Iri colors controls the choice of colors. Together, Caustic and Iridescence reproduce the effect that gives soap bubbles their rainbow colors. Light angle controls are the two grey spheres. To change the placement of a light,
drag the small blue dot to a new position. Best results come from
placing the light somewhere in the upper half of the ball. Spotlight sliders next to the light angle controls can produce uniform illumination
or a spotlight effect.
Color-buttons are for changing the lights' colors. To turn a light completely off, set its color to black.
| |  plain bevel with gloss 
reflection and texture 
glassiness and prismatic caustics 
iridescence 
color button
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The next column of controls is concerned with texture and reflections. Texture popup menu chooses the texture you want. The first item is 'no texture';
the next eleven items are built-in textures; and the last item
is the custom texture. You can use any greyscale PICT file (on Macintosh) or BMP file (on Windows) as a custom texture. To do this, select the custom texture item from the popup menu, and use the file browser to choose a picture. SuperBladePro will load the picture and use it as a texture. The texture graphic is just below. Clicking on it is another way you can load a new texture file. You can reposition the texture by dragging it with the mouse. Texture files are "height fields" and describe the shape of a surface. Black is low, white is high, grey is in between. SuperBladePro comes with several texture files in its 'environments and textures ' folder, and you can make your own. They can be as large as 256 by 256 pixels. Larger ones will be squeezed to fit. The right edge should wrap seamlessly around to the left, and the top to the bottom. The texture zoom slider is right below the texture graphic. It can scale the texture up or down by a factor of 16. Next is the environment graphic: When Reflection is on, Blade will produce mirrorlike reflections of the environment graphic. Just click on the graphic and you can load any PICT file (on Macintosh) or BMP file (on Windows) as an environment. You can find several samples in the 'environments and textures' folder that came with SuperBladePro. If you don't want your selection to be reflective, turn the reflection
slider down to zero. Some of the example environments, like 'gold', appear to contain their own light source coming from the top left. If that conflicts with your design plan, you can spin the environment with the environment spinner button, so that it better matches the rest of the lighting. This button is the one with the little curly arrow on it. | |  texture popup

texture graphic

environment graphic with spinner button | |
Dice randomize the settings. Click it as much as you want to see different
effects. Glue mode lets you combine SuperBladePro's result with the underlying image. Modes other than "normal" produce special effects. Plus % and minus buttons: if the selected image area is larger than the preview are, these
buttons will let you zoom in and out . You can also reposition
the preview by dragging it around; your cursor will turn into
a hand. Auto Preview makes the preview update automatically whenever you move any
control. Turn it off if you want to save time. Load preset: SuperBladePro comes with some presets, which are files containing
settings. To load one, click this button and browse for a preset
file. Save preset: When you make an effect you like, click this button to save the
settings in a file.
Important: The presets expect their texture and environment files to be
in the 'environments and textures' folder. If presets fail to
load properly, SuperBladePro will ask you where that folder is.
The Installation section of this guide explains in more detail.
| |  dice

glue mode

load preset

save preset
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Manage presets lets you do three things:
- If you have a folder full of presets from original BladePro, you can automatically turn them into SuperBladePro presets containing previews.
- You can make a web page showing all your texture and environment images.
- You can make a web page that displays all the presets' previews, and lists which environment and texture files they use.
| |  manage presets
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At the bottom of the screen are some more controls. SuperBladePro can simulate water stains. This uses four sliders: Rain is the amount of water falling from the top of the selection. Evaporation sets the rate at which water evaporates. If evaporation is greater
than rain, waterstains may only appear near wrinkles in the surface. Diffusion controls the horozontal spread of the water Wander makes water wander over flat areas instead of falling straight
down. There are two rain color buttons. As rain becomes heavier, the color changes from the first color
to the second. There is a wet/dry checkbox which controls whether the rain acts like opaque paint or transparent
dye. | |  hubcap with rain 
more evaporation 
less diffusion 
less wander 
wet rain
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The remaining controls produce a weathered or damaged appearance.
Dust makes dull powder appear on upward-facing surfaces. Grit puts high-frequency noise in the texture. Tarnish puts dull, matte color in the concave parts of the surface. The color button just to the right of the slider lets you change the tarnish color. Abrasion is similar to Tarnish, but it puts dirt on convex areas. Moss places moss-like matter on upward-facing surfaces. Moss has two color buttons: one for the moss itself, one for the underlying soil. Leakiness makes the moss leak water, and makes the blotches soak in the resulting stains. Blotches grows lichen-like blobs. Blotches have color, scale, and coverage
controls. Blotch Size makes the blotches bigger or smaller. The random seed nearby changes the detail of the blotches. You can click it repeatedly
until you see the effect you like. | |  dust and grit 
green tarnish & red abrasion 
moss 
blotches 
random seed
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Other controls
| | | | Undo backs up one step.
Simple Bevel produces a plain effect suitable for making buttons.
Three more buttons: OK Applies the effect to your image. Cancel Dismisses the filter, and leaves the image unchanged. Register Allows you to type in a registration code. | |
undo

simple bevel
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Five effects you can try 1. A web button
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More tutorials... | | Suppose you want to make a web button that has the word "Go" on
it. In your paint program, paint an area in some neutral color. With
your text tool, make the word "Go" in green. Using your favorite selection tool, with antialiasing turned on,
select a a button-shaped area around the word. Bring up SuperBladePro. Click the Load button (it looks like a
CD with a blue triangle pointing from it) . Navigate to your 'environments
and textures' folder and open the preset called 'button, basic'. After the preset loads, the preview should show your button with
a basic bevel effect. Play with the controls. The Radius control changes the width of
the bevel. The Shape, Height, and Texture controls, in particular,
let you make the most useful changes. Click OK. There's your button.
For a more sophisticated effect, make a button as above but without
the word "Go". Instead, make a blank button. Then, in a new layer,
make a selection in the shape of the word "Go" and use SuperBladePro
to make the word look like gold; use the preset called called
'gold, basic'. Last, settle the word "Go" on the button by giving
it a drop shadow. | |  | |
2. A ruby
| | | | Make a selection with some straight sides and fill it with ruby-red.
Bring up SuperBladePro and decide how you want your ruby to look.
Adjust the Shape and Radius and Height to produce a shape with
some internal edges in it. Rubies are glassy, so set Glassiness to about 90. You want it
to appear sparkly and reflective, so set Gloss to about 50, Glare
to 50, Reflection to 75. Choose an environment with flattering
colors in it: 'Rum' is nice. To increase sparkle further, turn Caustic up to 60 to produce a highlight away from the light. Even better, use both light sources: move the second one to about the 2 o'clock position, and set its color to creamy yellow. Introduce more variety of color by turning Iridescence to about
15 and putting the Iri Colors slider somewhere in a pink-and-yellow
region. Subtle texture will make your ruby look best. Click the texture
graphic and load the texture file called 'ripples2'. Set the Texture
slider to something between 10 and 30, and experiment with the
Texture Zoom until you like the result. Click OK. There's your ruby.
| |  | |
3. A glassy logo
| | | | Use your text tool to write a word in 50% gray, using a large,
husky font - say, Gill Sans Bold at 100 pt. Make sure the text is selected, and call up SuperBladePro. Load
the 'rainbow glass' preset. The word should now appear as glass
with a bright rainbow caustic. Play with the controls. Try a white caustic, or a different environment,
or a different degree of glassiness or reflectivity.
Click OK if you like the effect.
If you want to experiment with colored glass, cancel out of the
filter, and use your paint tools to paint each letter a different
color. Moderately saturated tones at about half of full brightness
work best. Then go back into the filter and see how the colored
glass looks.
| |  | |
4. Tarnished metal
| | | | Select a region of your image, and call up SuperBladePro. Load the preset called 'old copper'. The important elements here
are 100% reflection of a coppery environment, a wavy texture,
some pale green tarnish like corroded copper, and a light source
at the upper left, which matches the light in the environment
map. If the real light and the light in the environment don't match,
the tarnish will look wrong. If you want, try moving the light
source and spinning the environment to see how they need to be
in sync. The tarnish collects in the concave parts of the surface, so it
will react to the scale and height of the texture, as well as
the crevices in some of the bevel shapes. Try changing those settings
and the tarnish amount and color to see how they interact. Try some other combinations: the environment 'city' with black
tarnish looks like dirty silver. The 'dull steel' environment
with brick-red tarnish looks like rust; strange tarnish colors
like magenta give a surreal effect. Good textures to use with tarnish are 'scales', 'pits', 'crackle',
and 'dimples'. And try the preset called 'my tailpipe' to see
a oxidized metal effect that uses tarnish and iridescence together. | |  | |
5. Iridescent surfaces
| | | | Select a part of your image, and call up SuperBladePro, and load
the preset called 'ski goggles 1'. The selection reflects a nearly colorless environment, but the
iridescence adds plenty of color to the result. The Iridescence
slider controls the strength of the added color, and the Iri Colors
slider decides the range of possible hues. The final outcome of colors will react to the shape of the bevel
and the strength of the texture, so try changing those settings
to get a feel for how the colors change. Basically, the more strongly
sloped the surface gets, the wider variety of colors it will have. The Iri Colors slider produces assorted effects. At zero, iridescence
disappears. At very small values, about 7, surfaces become dull
brown, like slightly oxidized metal. At 12, you have an anti-reflective
coating. Soap bubbles are about 25, and higher values give the
hues you see in ski goggles and sunglasses. Adding a very small amount of iridescence can create attractive
variation in hue in any effect. Check out the preset 'my tailpipe'
and change its iridescence settings to see what's possible. | |  | |
Hints
| | | | Selections with an antialiased edge will yield vastly better results
than ones with hard edges. Most paint programs have an option
to create an antialiased edge for text-shaped and freehand selections.
If you find that the textures look grainy, try setting your monitor
to 24-bit (millions of colors) mode rather than 16-bit (thousands
of colors) mode. The environment and texture graphics can be any PICT (on Macintosh) or BMP (on Windows), and you can use your paint software to make your own. Included with SuperBladePro are...
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Environments
2am
bronze sunset
cheap gold
city
copper
Curacao
driftwood
dull steel
glitter
gold
hillside
island
la-la land
puffy
red copper
road
rum
sea & sky
tinsel
watery
white chrome
winter
big city
canal
chinarock
cove
empire
greenstairs
lumphini
samui
victoria sky
zwolle
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Textures
burrs
cow
crackle
crumples
dendrites
dimples
fibrous
grass
lumps
pits
plaster
ringlets
ripples2
ruffles
scales
silk
tumor
turbulence
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You can use the preset management feature to keep track of your enviroments and textures.
Free SuperBladePro tutorials are available online at http://www.flamingpear.com/download.html .
Several Extra Texture Packs are available for free too.
If you want to make your own metal environments, it aids realism
to make the bright parts slightly bluer and the dark parts slightly
redder than your base hue.
If you want to produce a scene with shiny objects in front of some backdrop, you can use a small (64x64 pixels or so) version of the backdrop as your environment map. This way the shiny objects will match their background. There's an example of this online.
Constructing a 3-D shape from a selection's edge results in a
slightly ripply surface, so reflections tend to have fine striations
in them. For that reason, the best results come from environments
with contrasty ramps of color and a bare minimum of detail. Take
a look at the included samples to get an idea.
You can use bevels with a small radius and negative height to
create a chiseled edge.
SuperBladePro can be used purely as a texture generator; just
set Bevel Height to zero, and reduce Radius to the minimum. Try
this using the texture 'dimples' and some tarnish.
You can make your own textures: dark areas are low, bright areas
are high. Try this recipe:
Find an interesting piece of a some image.
Use the cloning brush to make a roughly square, roughly homogenous
chunk
Gaussian Blur by about 0.5 pixels
Adjust->Auto Levels
Use the highpass filter on it, radius 4 to 8 pixels
Adjust->Auto Levels again
Wrap the edges of the selection to make a seamless tile.
Try inverting the grey values of the whole image. If the picture
becomes generally darker, then use the inverted picture. That
way, positive settings of the texture slider will produce bumps,
and negative settings pits.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to troubleshooting questions appear online at http://www.flamingpear.com/faq.html. More presets and tutorials appear here and here. You can check for new releases of the filter at www.flamingpear.com . And if you have ideas for improvements, or commentary, or questions, please email support@flamingpear.com. | | | |
Version History
Version 1.5 June 2007
Fixes a problem where the plug-in wouldn't remember its registration when it was installed in one user account but activated in another.
Version 1.45 December 2005
Fixes the result when used in a 16bit layer.
Version 1.42 October 2004
Faster. Does not forget settings when used with Paint Shop Pro 9.
Version 1.4 July 2004
Works with 16-bit-per-component color.
Version 1.3a June 2004
Fixes incorrect results with floating selections in PSP8.
Version 1.3 April 2004
Adds dozens of new glue modes.
Version 1.2 December 2003
Recordable as a Photoshop action.
Version 1.1 September 2003
Adds the preset-management feature. Changes the behavior of zoomed-out selections in PSP8 again.
Version 1.09a July 2003
Makes the big previews work more reliably. Fixes the numeric display of the texture-zoom slider in the Mac OS X version.
Version 1.09 April 2003
Adds bigger previews in the preset browser. Adds a button for automatically updating a whole folder of presets.
Version 1.08 April 2003
Fixes the appearance of zoomed-out views in Paint Shop Pro 8 . Version 1.07 December 2002 Fixes the appearance of text in the interface when running under
Mac OS X 10.2.3 . Version 1.06 April 2002 Fixes a bug in the both the Windows and Macintosh versions where
loading presets would sometimes cause spurious error messages. Version 1.04 August 2001 Fixes yet a third bug in the Macintosh version where presets would
sometimes not load their texture and environment files. This version
is PowerPC only. Version 1.02 September 2000 Fixes another bug in the Macintosh version where presets would
sometimes not load their texture and environment files. Version 1.01 September 2000 Fixes a bug in the Macintosh version where presets would sometimes
not load their texture and environment files. Version 1.0 September 2000 The first public release. Novel features include water stains, blotches, abrasion, spotlighting, dust, grit, embossing, moss, and smooth Gaussian bevels. The Windows version will operate correctly even if Windows is installed on a drive other than C:. | | | |
How to Purchase
You can place an order online here . A secure server for transactions is available. Questions Answers to common technical questions appear on the support page , and free upgrades appear periodically on the download page . Trouble with your order? Orders are handled by Kagi ; please contact admin@kagi.com . For bug reports and technical questions about the software, please
write to support@flamingpear.com .
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