to 404, the X value to 35, and the Y value to 144. Note You created a rectangle that is 4 pixels wider and taller than the content area specified in ActionScript, placed 2 pixels to the left and above it, to create a 2-pixel frame. 6. Select the rectangle, and press F8 to convert the border to a symbol. 7. In the Convert To Symbol dialog box, select Movie Clip and name it photo_frame. Click OK. 8. Select frame 10 on the Photo Frame layer, and press F6 to insert a keyframe. [View full size image] 9. Select any frame between frames 1 and 10, and select Motion from the Tween menu in the Property inspector. 10. Select frame 1 on the Photo Frame layer, and then select the instance of the photo_frame symbol on the Stage. 11. In the Transform panel, set the width and height to 20%, and press Enter or Return. 12. Unlock the Background layer, and select it. Click off the Stage to deselect the background gradients. 13. Select the Rectangle tool. Set the fill to none, and the stroke color to #999999. 14. Draw a rectangle on the Stage, and then set the following values in the Property inspector: stroke height=2 pixels, width=800, height=600, X=0, Y=0. 15. Lock the Background layer again. Adding a Title In this project, the title appears on the background of the page, no matter what else is displayed. 1. Select frame 1 on the Title layer. 2. Select the Text tool, and click an insertion point in the upper-left corner of the Stage. 3. Type Leon Kritch Photography. 4. Select all the text. In the Property inspector, select Static Text from the pop-up menu, select Arial for the typeface, and select 42 for the text size. Click the Left Align icon. 5. Select just Leon Kritch, and change the text color to #FFCC00. 6. Select just Photography, and change the text color to #333333. 7. Select the text with the Selection tool. In the Property inspector, set the X value to 30 and the Y value to 10. Creating a Selection Marker