How To Create a Stunning Vista Inspired Menu
In Interface by Ricky NellesThis tutorial will show you how to make a semi-transparent vista inspired menu, using gradients, shadows and blurring to produce a stunning modern effect.
Step 1
Open a new canvas that is 600x335px. Begin by showing rulers (View>Rulers) then create two guides similar to below. Create one at 285px and the other at 310px.

Step 2
Create a Rectangle (U) that fills the lower ruled area and label the layer “lower bar”. Open up the Effects Menu for the layer. Navigate to the Gradient Overlay property and apply a gradient between #000000 and #0c0c0c at 90 degrees.
Now create another rectangle in the upper rules area and name the layer “upper bar”. Again open up the effects menu and apply a Gradient Overlay between #35393d and #787b7d at 90 degrees. Select the two rectangles created so far and change the Opacity to 90%. When a background is added later, this will provide a nice effect, as it allows the background to slightly show through.

Step 3
The next step is to add a highlight to the menu using the Line Tool (U). Select the Line Tool and change the weight to 2px. Draw a line across the bar and change the colour to #9fa2a4. Rename this layer to “lower highlight”. Now draw another line directly above the previous and change the colour to #484b4d and change the name to “upper highlight”. Group these layers with bar layers in a group called “bar”. This stage completes the basis of the menu.

Step 4
Now that the menu bar is complete, we can now create a set of dividers to go between the text. Select the Line Tool again and leave the weight at 2px. Draw a vertical line from the center ruler mark that stops a few pixels before the highlight. This does not need to be exact and can easily be adjusted later. Open the effects menu and apply a Gradient Overlay at 90 degrees between #676a6d and #4d6672. Label this layer “upper divider”.
Draw another vertical line from the center ruler going down and stopping the same distance from the edge as above. This section does not have a gradient, so change the color to #43474b. Rename this layer to “lower divider”. Group the two sections of the divider and name the group “divider”.

Step 5
Select the Type Tool (T) and change the colour to white (#FFFFFF). The font I chose to use for the menu is called Segoe UI because it is the font used in the Vista user interface. However not everyone has this font, so as a replacement Arial will do. Set the size to 11pt and type your links out, spacing them evenly. Group them together and name the group “links”.
Now copy your dividers and space them in between the links. You should end up with something similar to this.

Step 6
Now the menu bar is basically completed, so you can add a background of your choice. The background I chose is a photograph of grass. Anything colourful or scenic will do.

Copy your background into the menu and rename the layer Background. Make sure this layer is at the back in your layers palette. Note the transparency in the menu allows the background to show through without overpowering.

Step 7
This step will create the blurred rounded rectangle that is behind the text. This effect is quite common in Vista and is a good technique. It takes the focus of the background and places it on the text, but still shows the beautiful scene behind.
First of all, duplicate the background. This layer is not permanent, but we will be cutting a selection out of it. Then using the Rounded Rectangle Tool (U) draw a shape that starts past the left edge of the canvas. This means that the shape only has two rounded edges.
Rasterize the layer and then using the Magic Wand Tool (W) select the rectangle and delete the color while keeping the outline. Now select the background copy and cut from that layer. Delete the background copy layer and add another new layer called “blur”.
Paste the shape in the layer called “blur” and then apply a Gaussian Blur of 5px (Filter>Blur>Gaussian Blur). Then apply a Drop Shadow as shown below.

Step 8
Now add your text inside the blur. Using the same typeface as the links (Segoe UI) type your name and tagline. Select some of the text and make it bold and keep some normal, apply a Drop Shadow and a Gradient as well. This produces a modern looking text that has a striking look.

Step 9
This step is optional, as it will produce the blue highlighted glow that will become our hover effect. Draw a large Ellipse (U) that fills the area between the dividers. Change the color of the ellipse to #5c94c5 and apply a Gaussian blur of 10px. The shape has now become a raster layer, and you can clean up the excess blur by using the Marquee Tool (M).

Conclusion
This menu produces a stunning effect when coupled with a bright scenic background. It uses transparency to great effect as well as modern gradients. The use of highlights is a great trick to providing a cutting-edge modern look to pictures. This menu would be quite easy to slice up and turn into a very functional web based menu with hover states.

Comments
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Matthew Lane
January 19th, 2008
Beautiful and simple.
Elliott Cost
January 19th, 2008
First!
mave
January 19th, 2008
don’t you think “spoonfed photoshop” is a bit insulting to your readers? I’ve been considering submitting tutorials, but that tagline really turns me off. I don’t think of people as babies, I think of them as intelligent and inquiring.
Colin
January 19th, 2008
wow! i love tiny lil things you never even think about! very nice, smooth, crisp and awwwwwwesome!
naveed
January 19th, 2008
i love the tiny thing the blue that u did in the end..nice..
Ralph
January 19th, 2008
Beautiful!!
Joseph
January 19th, 2008
eh, I’ve been doing this since before vista came out. good tut though, just nothin new.
Julio Fragoso
January 19th, 2008
i´ll try later… and post on my blog…
great tuto dude!
Eli
January 19th, 2008
Fourth. Sorry, just trying to be lame like Elliot up there.
Nice tutorial, nothing new though.
Juanjo Vargas
January 19th, 2008
This really looks like vista! Good work!
Constantin Potorac
January 19th, 2008
Nice Job. Really slick.
Erik
January 19th, 2008
Why do something that’s been done before?
But it’s slick and looks good!
giackop
January 19th, 2008
Yes very good tut!! Congrats..
Cain
January 19th, 2008
I don’t like the blue gradient for the rollover. Other than that its nice, but like everyone else has said, nothing new.
shoo
January 19th, 2008
Why does everybody have to say that this aint some new stuff? There is ALWAYS people who dont know how to do certain things in PS and if you aint can post “old” tutorials, there woulndt be much to see here.
Thanks for all great tutorials
Shane
January 20th, 2008
Another nice tutorial - thanks.
das_1980
January 20th, 2008
Why do these people insist on being critical. The point is not whether you have seen the effect before, the point it to learn the techniques and apply them to your own ideas and artwork. Thanks for all the amazing tutorials, this site is head and shoulders above all the rest, keep up the good work.
Markus
January 20th, 2008
Great tutorial! I dont like the blue rollover! (:
amnhacworld
January 20th, 2008
wow..nice..i like it..gud tutorial ^^
hcabbos
January 20th, 2008
I guess I understand all the “nothing new” comments. What in God’s earth hasn’t been done before? Give the guy some credit for showing us the process and taking time out of life to share something with us. Even if the end result isn’t up your alley, there could be a subtle technique that you could use outside of this tut. And yea, some of you guys said thanks but to me it’s nullified with “nothing new.” Do any of you have your own blogs with ORIGINAL content?!
Alright, my rant is over. Just had to get that out.
shahram
January 20th, 2008
wow, i love it. u relay great job.
jeff finn
January 20th, 2008
I agree with hcabbos. Way to set them straight brother (sister?)
Turd Burgalar
January 20th, 2008
I 2nd that hcabbos.
Aman.
Thanks for the tutorial, it gave me a few ideas.
Fabio Sasso
January 20th, 2008
That’s really cool, even though Im a mac user I really like the vista’s interface design.
Thanks for the tutorial!
Stepehn
January 20th, 2008
I’d like to see how to do the Glass Shelf Dock effect in Leopard. That would make for an interesting tutorial.
Stephen
January 20th, 2008
I’d like to see how to do the Glass Shelf Dock effect in Leopard. That would make for an interesting tutorial.
Tama
January 20th, 2008
I agree with Stephen! That’d be awesome
Tom Sieron
January 20th, 2008
Step 2 can be done with one layer (bar) instead of two (upper and lower bar), you just need to edit the gradient in Gradient Overlay. Just my two cents.
In general UI controls are easy to draw - nothing more than a few layer effects. I’d love to see more tuts on creating complete images with cool effects, posters and that kind of thing, with more insight in style, typography and composition.
JOnO
January 20th, 2008
The description in Step 7 didn’t actually produce what was shown. In order to produce a coherent drop shadow, I had to have a second copy of the cutout underneath the Blur layer and apply the drop shadow to that. Trying to drop shadow the blur layer directly just gave me a mushy outline, and no edge.
Sancho Panza
January 20th, 2008
I totally agree with hcabbos. The techniques you were using are really helpful for guys like me - the ones who just started working with photoshop. With every single tutorial you guys write I keep on learning new stuff. Thanks a lot for that! I really appreciate your affort and hope you keep up the good work!
greetz sancho panza
Nima
January 20th, 2008
Thank you
Didik
January 20th, 2008
You don’t need to become a prodigy in Photoshop for this tutorial. It’s easily followed and clear. I’m waiting for the Leopard glass effect, though.
Ant
January 20th, 2008
Very Good…
Robin
January 20th, 2008
Leopard Glass Dock wouldn’t be difficult: a slightly gradiated grey hue rectangle layer (i’d use a shape layer so you can easily scale). Layer above that is your Swishy curve. Use a shape layer created with your pen tool (easier to do in illustrator then port in). Color it grey as well. Set layer from “normal” to “overlay” and adjust opacity (guessing 33% or so). On other layers, your icons with a dropshadow set to -90 degrees. Replicate your icon layers then flip vertical and move below original. Use layer mask with gradient to gradient knock out the lower icon’s opacity, then adjust the layer opacity to i’m guessing 50% or so. Last adjustment is the thin 3px or so bar at bottom of glass rectangle. Maybe apply v/ slight gradient to that.
Hope that helps.
Hector Rojas
January 20th, 2008
I’d disagree with Tom Sieron above, after all, this is a PSD Tutorials site, not a design/composition’how to be a designer tutorials site.
I can see the emphasis is in showing the user how to do certain things with Photoshop, not how to design or compose things.
That’s a different monster all by itself.
Thanks for the tut.
andreic
January 21st, 2008
well, even if im new or not in using photoshop, i do believe that this tutorial will hit the right target; the rest of the people which are not that experienced in using it as most of us here are (or pretend they are)
therapix
January 21st, 2008
Magnificent. Very simple for advanced user, but clever nevertheless.
Inspiration Up
January 21st, 2008
Nice tut, Surely I will use it soon.i
Mark Abucayon
January 21st, 2008
wow that was so nice- very excellent great job I have to use this once later.
Cody
January 21st, 2008
hahaha the guy said “First” he wasnt ever first LMAO, good tut though
GeminiArt
January 21st, 2008
great style and simple tutorial
good job
and thanks
Gehackte
January 22nd, 2008
Woow that kicks ass(L) love it tyvm
Livingston
January 22nd, 2008
Wonderful!
I’ve done several works like this before. But this one is different.
thanks!
Tommy P
January 22nd, 2008
Nice work!
Leigh Nugent
January 22nd, 2008
Once again, you guys have delivered a great, easy to follow, tutorial. Really love the blurred effect!!
Jhon
January 22nd, 2008
Great tut.
Recomendation:
Step 7: No need to duplicate layer. Just Make the trick selecting de rounded square and press Ctr+J (layer via copy).
mike
January 22nd, 2008
wow… nice.
Chris Laskey
January 22nd, 2008
Another great tutorial. Then again, that’s pretty par for the course at psdtuts.
I’m constantly inspired by the PSDtuts here. Even in the cases where I might already know how to produce one element, seeing the way the different elements are put together is creatively inspiring.
Thanks Ricky.
Clever Mind
January 22nd, 2008
Very nice tut, like many said before, and to those who have “seen it before” take it for whats its worth. Those of us that have been using PS since v5 or 6 know that there really is no end to what can be done, and a nice simple to follow tut is always refreshing and god to see. Thanks again
bigb159
January 23rd, 2008
Great tut. I like the spoonfed idea, and I can’t believe someone would rant about that. Often time we who visit here are students or regular joes just trying out our luck with some fun new art program. Collis and his gang are breaking it up into little pieces for us. If you “feel offended” *boo-hoo* you can get the guts to go make your own successful site. Nice work guys!
HaaGeN
January 23rd, 2008
Menu bars always made me excited, they are fun to do and can achieve many cool effects, your tutorial just added to my bag of tricks in doing menu bars, thank you
Fredro
January 23rd, 2008
What am I doing wrong? My blur effect looks off for some reason …
http://i259.photobucket.com/albums/hh304/chilltron/vstep-background.jpg
chubba
January 23rd, 2008
great job
Tim
January 23rd, 2008
To Fredro,
I had the same problem as you with the “mushy” edge but I followed what JOnO said above and it worked for me.
JOnO:
The description in Step 7 didn’t actually produce what was shown. In order to produce a coherent drop shadow, I had to have a second copy of the cutout underneath the Blur layer and apply the drop shadow to that. Trying to drop shadow the blur layer directly just gave me a mushy outline, and no edge.
Nolawi
January 24th, 2008
i wish you guys dont skip steps in the tutorials….
Brady J. Frey
January 24th, 2008
This is the first design article I’ve heard ’stunning’ and ‘vista’ in the same phrase.
adam
January 24th, 2008
spoonfed photoshop offensive? you know youre the reason america is the way it is, just let some stuff go. Im pretty sure they meant spoonfed in a sens that its being delivered to us.
Fredo
January 24th, 2008
@ Tim & JOnO:
Thank you, that helped a lot. The border looks much crisper
Hope this helps anyone else.
http://i259.photobucket.com/albums/hh304/chilltron/vstep-background2.jpg
Terry
January 25th, 2008
So mave comes on and cries about the “spoonfed” tagline, so he/she withholds a tutorial?
And then some of you complain this has been done before? What? Does everyone in the world already have a professional level of photoshop expertise? What about the people who just started? And personally, IMO, I see nothing wrong with showing someone a simple way to create what may APPEAR to beginner as a complex design.
Good Tut, and Keep it up. for the rest of you, Start your own successful site and make sure you NEVER put anything up there NOONE has EVER done before!
Dito
January 25th, 2008
wow, thanks for this great tutorial. as much as I hate Vista, it is pretty
Alex
January 28th, 2008
I love the spoonfed tagline. It implies it will be really easy to do if you follow the tutorial. It’s a great break from all the really crappy photoshop sites out there. Keep it up guys.
Chris
January 28th, 2008
There’s a mistake in the text at STEP 4:
The text says: “… and apply a Gradient Overlay at 90 degrees between #676a6d and #4d6672 …”, but the image shows another value of the gradient: #afb1b2 (= image) instead of the text value #4d6672.
As the value mentioned in the text will result in a much too dark divider, I think the value in the image shown at STEP 4 is the right one.
Raphael
January 28th, 2008
Very cool!
TNKS
ankraj
January 29th, 2008
awesome.. thanks
james
January 30th, 2008
WOW! this is amazing i neva thought of making somthing like this but now i will thanx alot
Pablete
February 2nd, 2008
Way too awesome like always!
Million thanks from Spain!
UtahLuxury.com
February 2nd, 2008
Beautiful. I am not a PC fan at all, but I love the blue accent on mouse-over. Good job and nice tutorial!
Ambrosiality
February 2nd, 2008
that’s really nice
ryan
February 6th, 2008
Great tutorial!
you can find that font Segoe UI for free at Microsoft’s website since it’s a system font for vista. Or at least it was.
Elliot
February 6th, 2008
Really love all the tutorials. This one is especially good. Found it really usefull when designing a mockup for my site. Thanks
http://thedevilwearsskirts.deviantart.com/art/Website-Design-Idea-76569617
Al
February 7th, 2008
Great post. One thing vista has right, really slick graphics, menus, and great use of transparency.
You could make some beautiful CSS menus out of this. Very nice.
Tickled
February 9th, 2008
Thank you for this tutorial. I had a header that I needed to redo and was browsing through this site again and this was perfect. It’s a nice combination of very simple steps.
I needed some ideas for a header I was commissioned to do within a day and this was a life saver. My final product isn’t amazing, but it works well within the constraints that I was given (specific color, had to have windsurfers in the bg, etc.).
This is the original:
http://toshcomputers.com/
And this is what I came up with:
http://chickado.com/work/tosh.jpg
Thank you again!
isa
February 10th, 2008
mave,
spoonfeeding simply means to “teach without challenging the students” (meaning is courtesy of WordWeb)
of course, if you heard it being said, and there were any accentuations, one could construe it to mean what you were implying, if there were an implication to begin with
otherwise, spoonfed is a great way to put what the people here at PSDTuts are doing.
cheers
lol
February 17th, 2008
Do you have any web resources that have all these excellent pictures that we can use for free?
kiwusek
February 20th, 2008
Just out of curiosity how do I go about making this work on the internet?
Any sites that tell explain this would be extremely helpful. As I made a template with a similar header but don’t know how to get it too work on the internet.
Martin O'Brien Grant
February 21st, 2008
Absolutely stunning. Your tutorials blow me away A++
Ben
February 22nd, 2008
I know it’s not a “new” look, as all of you downers above have pointed out, but this tutorial was a huge help to me when I wanted to create my own vista-style elements. Thanks!
Mauwi
February 24th, 2008
THANK YOU so much for the tut! It’s visually stunning
P.S to Mave: understand your point but I don’t mind it myself bc I know I’m being spoonfed in a sense till I get everything down.
Thanks Ricky!
Man Up
February 26th, 2008
Mave, your an idiot, it’s babies like you who complain about everything that makes this world a crummy place sometimes.
Maybe you can start your own web site called “Iamoffendedbyeverything.com”.. whiney ass
This was a good tutorial.
preston
February 26th, 2008
Very nice tutorial. By the way, I love the slogan.
manish
March 4th, 2008
it really very cool tutorial.
FraGG
March 6th, 2008
For the blurred rounded rectangle simply make your shape with selection tool and on the background layer hit “Ctrl J” this will duplicate the selected area then apply Blur (while he is selected) and at last drop shadow.
Sorry for my english i’m french ^^
mavefan
March 8th, 2008
mave shutup
IFx
March 8th, 2008
Mr. Isa & Mr. trip-o-matic spoona”: Yeah! as anybody anywhere on the net, I’m gladful to see clever work “how to” for free and in tha” easy way. Why? I’m also trying to be creative, but as a web designer it’s really hard to get an ID/idea three or six times per month. So that’s why I love this site, it inspires me… merci ♥ ♥ ♥
Anny
March 9th, 2008
great job ^^
Dave
March 10th, 2008
Great as a tut ….. But encouraging image based navigation for a website is not so good!
luis
March 11th, 2008
Nice tutorial
two cents
March 11th, 2008
Nothing worse than a nerd bragging about how they already knew how to do it. Mave’s comment about the name of this blog is just ridiculous. People don’t bring the residual effects from a traumatic childhood to the web. Thanks!
Andrew
March 12th, 2008
Nice tutorial
Mewie
March 12th, 2008
I’m with kiwusek - how do you translate this onto the Internet? What software do you use besides Photoshop?
I am definitely encouraged to try something like this out soon for my blog. VERY VERY COOL! Thanks so much.
Opsy
March 14th, 2008
Please how do I clean up the excess blur using the marquee tool. I’m a newbie at photoshop but I like the effect.
WiSH
March 18th, 2008
very nice…!
MO
March 27th, 2008
Mave “don’t you think “spoonfed photoshop” is a bit insulting to your readers? I’ve been considering submitting tutorials, but that tagline really turns me off. I don’t think of people as babies, I think of them as intelligent and inquiring.”
Speaking from a newbie with no creativity prospectuse, this is GOLD!!! excellent tutorial.. too bad there isnt one demonstrating how to slice and code this into a valid css/xhtml site.
Nikki Bryan
April 1st, 2008
Thank you for this tutorial!
It helps me a lot.
rukoiatka
April 2nd, 2008
guys, what is vista?
toddpat
April 9th, 2008
how about a follow-up tut on how to slice and dice to move over to a website?
most excellent! thanks!
Enes
April 9th, 2008
This is like far from vista, your borders are to thick man, and it just makes it look so unprofessional. Anyway, its a nice attempt, it looks really akward. The only good thing about the tutorial is the lightning you’ve made.
Willie
April 16th, 2008
Great tutorial. Thanks! I think the menubar looks outstanding.
Xeon
April 18th, 2008
Godlike
SomeGuy
April 18th, 2008
Im kinda lazy, can you include the psd here? I just want to change the nav text and slice it.
anca v.
April 22nd, 2008
I’ve tried to do this tutorial, but like many said there is a step missing or something… I achieved the same drop shadow effect that didn’t look good. I’ve read all the comments, mostly what fraGG and jOnO said. but then I thought of another way (I’m good at this things, especially if u use photoshop everyday like me). u first take the background copy and make a cutting out of it using the shape with magic wand tool, apply gaussian blur to the copy, then return to the shape layer, go to fill layer and put 0% and THEN apply drop shadow. U don’t have to use any copy of the blurred section or what it says in the tutorial at step 7.
what FILL LAYER does is reduce the opacity of the layer without tempering with the blending options. if u use opacity to 0% that will temper with the blending options, and them too will be at 0%. it’s much more simpler than what is explained in the tutorial.
p.s. the drop shadow that is applied to the shape is not right in the tutorial. to have an even shadow all over the shape the distance must be 0px. it didn’t look right when I did it.
Florencia (Arg)
April 26th, 2008
Very Very niceeeeeeeeee! I love it!
Excellent!
I try it!
alecme
May 2nd, 2008
Great, concice, an work for my.
Thanks…
Vita
May 4th, 2008
Wow! Simple but so effective!!!
thank you.
aleks
May 5th, 2008
thanks for the help, however this tutorial i found EXTREMELY confusing, often leaving alot of the work to guess
francism214
May 10th, 2008
To the critics:
Let’s be face the fact that some of the guys here are not as good as you are we were once like them. I didn’t learn photoshop in one day and became pro and so are you. Wouldn’t hurt if you can just post additional comments or suggestions to enhance this tut? =) Let’s be professional and appreciate whatever are imparted tuts on this site.
To the author of this tuts:
Good job! Keep it up!