Photoshop Double Borders

Filed under Design, Photoshop | 10/03/2010

Double borders can be a great way to add some extra depth to gallery thumbnails or just images in general (see my other post http://bit.ly/8EBjEX). This is simple enough to achieve in a website just using CSS, but it’s a different story when your in the design stage and working purely with Photoshop or some alternative.

Until recently, my method of adding double borders to photos in Photoshop would be to draw a square behind it, and make it about 5 or 10 pixels bigger than the photo itself. I would then add an inside stroke to the background square to give a double border effect.

This was a pain when it came to resizing the photo and it can make your .psd’s a little bloated, so here’s a little trick I discovered for creating double borders.

Grab a Photo

Take any photo to work on, here’s one from my vast collection of iStock’s weekly free photos.

Add an Inner Glow

Make sure you have the blend mode set to normal, opacity at 100%, choke at 100%, and range set to 1%. Set the size and colour to whatever you like, in this case I’m using 5 pixels and a light grey.

Add a Stroke

Now we need to add a stroke for the second border. Make sure that this is set at a smaller size than the glow otherwise you will only see the stroke and not the glow! Also set the position to inside, otherwise you’ll get some unintentional rounded corners (well, so long as you don’t want rounded corners). Then pick any colour, I’m using dark grey for this one.

BANG!

There we have it, double borders. I hope my blog post has been useful and to-the-point! Any questions or feedback? Feel free to leave a comment.

3 Responses to: Photoshop Double Borders

Martin Bean
18:13 on March 14th, 2010

Yup, the inner glow/stroke combination is pretty handy for double borders.

Also good to see someone is still designing in Photoshop and not following the lead of ” web celebrities” telling us that we should be designing in the browser.

Matt
18:22 on March 14th, 2010

I know what you mean, I’m dead against this whole ‘designing in the browser’ malarchy, I was even considering writing a blog post about it!

Graham Dodd
14:58 on March 24th, 2010

Myself, I’m not a massive fan of this ‘double border’ look.

At the minute, I’m quite enjoying a similar effect, achieved by, say a 3px padding on the image, then a 2px / 3px border around that!! Obviously, the bigger the thumbnail, the bigger you may want to increase these widths?

Nice post lad

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