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To: jmaroneps37

“Yet the copy birth certificate (pg. 12) has a clipping mask within the margins.”
Pardon my ignorance, what is a ‘clipping mask’?


4 posted on 07/08/2012 7:42:22 AM PDT by duckman (Dr Ben Carlson: Vision Not Division.)
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To: duckman
Not sure what a clipping mask is, but it appears to be a way of showing/hiding info in a layered document (an original document scan would not contain layers). A quick search gave me two instructional pages on clipping masks:

Instructions 1 Open any image in Photoshop. If the image consists of a single locked background layer, double click on the layer name. Change the layer name. The lock will disappear and you can now do anything you want with the layer. 2 Save the image as a Photoshop file (PSD). Other formats, such as JPEG, will flatten the image and cause you to lose any layers you create. Once you save as a PSD file, any changes you make will be preserved each time you save. 3 Create a shape for your mask. You can use the any of the vector shape tools or add type (you can even fill a selection area you created on a new layer). This will be your masking layer. Move the masking layer underneath the image layer. 4 Select the image layer in the layers palette. Choose "Create Clipping Mask" from the layers palette options menu. The layer will appear in the layers palette, marked with an arrow. Every pixel outside the lower masking layer will be hidden on the upper image layer. Tips & Warnings You can mask more than one layer with the same clipping mask. Simply drag any other layer between the clipping mask and the masked layer. Once the clipping mask is applied you can rearrange the order of any layer in the clipping mask group. Don't confuse clipping masks (or clipping layers) with clipping paths. Clipping paths are vector shapes that define image boundaries in page layout programs.

Question QUESTION: I am having a problem in Illustrator CS. The document is letter size and has a clipping mask to make just what I want visible. When I save out to pdf and open in preview, reader, or acrobat, the pdf includes the white space where the mask is outside of document size. Please help me...what am I doing wrong? Thanks ANSWER: Hi Matt- If your page size is set to 8.5" x 11" (letter size) and you have a masked item inside this space that is smaller than actual the page size, the entire page will still show up when you open the document in Acrobat, revealing the white background of the page. If you want the document to crop to the edges of the masked object you'll need to change the page size to fit the dimensions of that object rather than 8.5" x 11". To change the page size select File>Document Setup from the menu at the top of the screen. A new window will appear, allowing you to adjust the size of your page. Then, when you open the file in Acrobat you should see the page crop to the size of your masked object. One note, however- if the mask is a shape other than a rectangle you'll still see the white of the page behind the object since graphics files are always formatted as square or rectanglar pages. Hope that this information helps. Feel free to write back if you need additional assistance. Jennifer ---------- FOLLOW-UP ---------- QUESTION: Thanks, Jennifer. Actually, I wasn't very clear. The mask extends beyond the the 8.5"x11" size but the visible area is the letter size. When I save as a pdf, I am wanting to just have a letter size pdf of the visible part of my image. Instead, I get an image larger than letter size as if the space where the mask exists is also included in the pdf, which I don't want. Is that a little clearer. Sorry. Answer Hi Matt- You could try opening the PDF in Adobe Photoshop, cropping the document to the correct dimensions and saving a copy (keep the original Illustrator PDF in case you need to make edits later). This will allow you to open the file in Acrobat and eliminate the additional white space, although you will not be able to edit content in the Photoshop version of this file. Hope this is more helpful- Jennifer

13 posted on 07/08/2012 7:56:22 AM PDT by trebb ("If a man will not work, he should not eat" From 2 Thes 3)
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To: duckman

Photoshop (among other programs) can place a layer, and if there is something in the layer that you don’t want, you use a clipping mask to take it out. For instance, the signatures, if you have some extra line,etc., you don’t want there, you “clip around” digitally, leaving only what you want, place it on a layer over the layer under it. When i looked at the document, and opened it in Photoshop, there were indeed layers. I don’t remember a clipping mask, but I was just astounded at the layers of the signatures, dates, etc. placed over a blank document. It’s likely that the document (the blank birth certificate) was a copy of a scanned document (with information on it, which was then erased). It’s very curious.


26 posted on 07/08/2012 8:26:53 AM PDT by Thorliveshere
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To: duckman

I think I can explain this is in more simple terms. Whoever created the PDF of the long-form birth certificate created the document out of separate elements: a green security background, signatures, the boxes and the text, etc. The green background was larger than a standard 8 1/2 by 11 piece of paper, so the forger used a “clipping mask” or solid white frame about a 1/4 inch thick, to electronically lay around the edges of the background to make the background the right size. Instead of cropping the image, they applied a mask. It’s kind of like putting the image inside of a thin picture frame, except that the frame is white and can’t be seen. When the mask layer is hidden, the bacground gets bigger. There’s no way that scanning a document would create a clipping mask like this. Therefore, it’s an additional but obvious sign of manipulation. Does that make sense??


66 posted on 07/08/2012 11:29:26 AM PDT by edge919
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