Classic Frames 1
at a Glance

Maker: Human Software
Price: $39.95
Platforms: Macintosh and Windows
URL: http://www.human
software.
com

Overall Impression: Classic Frames behaves just as advertised: It produces photorealistic frames and automatically places them over your image, which is automatically resized to fit within the frame. The effect is quite nice, though applications for a frame creation filter are necessarily limited.

Key Benefits: Unlike stock images, this filter provides several tools for customizing the effect of the 60 frames that are included, such as combining frame elements, adjusting color and adding distortion.

Disappointments: The only drawback of this filter is that, as with stock photos, the frames get distorted with nonstandard aspect ratios.

Recommendation: Buy

 

review JUNE 6, 2001 • page 1, 2, complete, home

Human Software Classic Frames 1
Frame creation plugin for Photoshop, PhotoPaint and PaintShop

by David Nagel
Executive Producer
dnagel@digitalmedianet.com

This is the first plugin I've reviewed for this site that borders a bit on the consumer level. Human Software, maker of a number of higher-end image editing and effects plugins, publishes a filter called Classic Frames 1, which is designed exclusively to add frame edges to images. This is, of course, a one-trick filter, but it has several variations and a few pretty decent professional applications as well.


One of the 60 frame styles that ships with
Classic Frames 1 from Human Software.

For magazine layout, the possibility of adding frames to images can have a certain appeal, depending on the theme of a particular story. You know, if it's a story about elderly people going in for higher education, you can composite a fancy-looking frame over a fake diploma. Or for another story you could do one of those endless variations on American Gothic. Whatever.

Web designers can also use it for adding a little variation to pages containing thumbnails or, in the case of gallery pages, to beef up the metaphor a bit by adding actual frames to images.

But for me, the appeal actually lies somewhere else, where the impact can be a bit more significant, namely in the area of bump, texture and displacement maps for 3D animation.


The Load Effect window in Classic Frames 1 allows you to select frame styles, which can then be tweaked in the effects editor (seen below).

We've discussed before that 3D is becoming an essential tool for designers who work in Flash or need to create animations for the Web. And what goes hand in hand with 3D design? A hunger for texture maps.

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Dave Nagel is the producer of Creative Mac and Digital Media Designer; host of several World Wide User Groups, including Synthetik Studio Artist, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe InDesign, Adobe LiveMotion, Creative Mac and Digital Media Designer; and executive producer of the Digital Media Net family of publications.

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