Take a long piece of cardboard and glue the cutout to the end of it. About 1/4 of the way in, curve the cardboard up and glue it to the cutout. When you glue the stand to the cutout, make sure the cutout rests in a position that makes it look like the image is standing upright.
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Cardboard cutouts are creative ways to bring our favorite characters or movie scenes to life, and they can make spectacular gifts for special occasions. There are some essential tips that will make the production process smooth and simple. Find a high-resolution photo.
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Once you have cut the pieces out, tape them together in order to make the giant image. Take your giant image and place it on a giant sheet of cardboard. In order to make sure the image does not move when you trace it, use tiny bits of masking tape to secure it down. Using a pen or pencil trace around the image.
No matter what image you would like to display on your cardboard cutout, the only way to produce a visibly pleasing one is to use a high-resolution image that can be blown up to size without sacrificing quality.
Cardboard cutouts are creative ways to bring our favorite characters or movie scenes to life, and they can make spectacular gifts for special occasions. There are some essential tips that will make the production process smooth and simple. Advertisement.
You will need cardboard, paper, a printer, scissors, glue, tape, and an electronic device.
Find the image you want for the cutout online and save it to your computer.
Go to rasterbator.net and select create your poster. Add your image and go through all the steps given on the website. You will be able to control the size your cutout will turn out.
Save the end product from the website and open it. Then, print it out.
Reinforce small details on the cutout with tape and smaller cardboard strips. (Ex: limbs, hair, etc.)
Tape two or three strips of cardboard together and tape them to the back of the cutout to make it stand.
Make sure you have fun while making the cutout and try out different settings on rasterbator to find the best-looking cutout for you! Now you are able to make a cardboard cutout for yourself or your friends!
You want to photograph the subject on the cleanest possible white background. It also advisable to avoid harsh lighting and shadows. To accomplish this I used a seamless paper backdrop held aloft by two C-stands.
Using your photo editing software of choice (mine is Photoshop ), adjust the levels, brightness and contrast. In Photoshop, I first open the 'Levels' adjustment window and use the white eyedropper to select a spot on the backdrop. This assigns the backdrop as the most white portion of the image, and re-calibrates the image as such.
Once the image is color corrected, crop the image in close on the subject to remove everything but the white background.
Using the magic wand selection tool, create an outline around the subject. Create a new layer, and paint this layer white. If the white is covering up any part of the image, erase it.
Use the select all command and then the cut command. Scale the image up until it is about 5-10 inches taller than the height of the actual subject being portrayed. Next, place a guideline that is about two inches from the top, and then another marker that is [2" + height of subject] from the top of the image. Paste the image into the frame, and scale it until the head is at about the first marker, and the center of the feet is about on the second marker.
Print the image without any scaling using a large-scale color plotter printer. If you don't have access to such a printer, take your file to your local print shop or copy center and have them print it for you.
Cut a rough outline around your subject to remove as much of the background as possible. This is a rough first pass and shouldn't go in too close. This step is just about removing unnecessary paper to make it easier to work with.
When all the pieces have fully printed, cut them out. Once you have cut the pieces out, tape them together in order to make the giant image. Take your giant image and place it on a giant sheet of cardboard. In order to make sure the image does not move when you trace it, use tiny bits of masking tape to secure it down.
Take a long piece of cardboard and glue the cutout to the end of it. About 1/4 of the way in, curve the cardboard up and glue it to the cutout. When you glue the stand to the cutout, make sure the cutout rests in a position that makes it look like the image is standing upright.