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PhotoFrame 3.1
Combine & Customize Frames for Endless Creativity
With PhotoFrame 3.1 you can combine up to 32 different frames to create a truly
unique frame. Take Jim DiVitale for example, that's one of his images to the
right. He combined several frames together and then alternated the background
color of each to create the illusion that he developed the picture using traditional
darkroom techniques.

Here's an example of how Jim DiVitale uses PhotoFrame 3.1 to give his photos
a "wet" darkroom look. Photograph copyright Jim DiVitale.
You can control each frame like an independent layer. You can move, scale and
rotate it. You can also control it's color, opacity and blending mode. Each
frame can also have a colored border, glow and shadow. You can even apply textures
to frames to make them appear to be made of rusty metal, canvas, rock or any
of many included textures.
Photographer Keith Roland uses multiple frames together to create this fine
art edge. Photograph copyright Keith Roland.
Realistic Film Frames
By popular demand, we have added hundreds of realistic looking frames as a free
add-on for PhotoFrame 3.1. You can now add a wide variety of traditional film
borders to your digital photos. These realistic frames look just like the sloppy
edges you had in the darkroom or with Polaroid® instant films. We've even
gone so far as to combine some of these new film borders with some of the popular
emulsion frames to give you a very authentic look.
Layer Masks
PhotoFrame 3.1 understands transparency. You can set your background color to
transparent to let PhotoFrame 3.1 paint away the regions outside of your frame
so it reveals the layer below. You can also use PhotoFrame Pro 3 to create a
layer mask, which lets you control how layers blend together in Photoshop. The
best part is that the layer mask can be adjusted at anytime without harming
any information in your image
Flush-Mount Albums
PhotoFrame 3.1 is great for wedding photographers and scrapbookers who create
album pages with multiple images on a single canvas. Now you can create great-looking
layouts by framing each image.

Photographer Jim DiVitale shows once again how to combine multiple frames for
a subtle, yet striking frame. Photograph copyright Jim DiVitale.
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