Step-by-Step Guide To The Interlocking Frames Effect In Digital Scrapbooking

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Turn One Photo into a Showstopper with the Interlocking Frames Effect

Ever look at a photo and think, this needs a little something extra? Today I’m showing you how to create the Interlocking Frames Effect in Photoshop Elements—a simple trick that makes a single photo look like multiple, overlapping frames. It’s fast, fun, and a great way to direct the eye to your favorite details while trimming out visual noise.

We’ll use masks, groups, and a clean stroke frame to build the illusion. If you’re a digital scrapbooker or art journaler who loves an elegant “wow,” this one’s for you.

What Is the Interlocking Frames Effect?

The interlocking frames effect makes it appear as if different parts of a single photo are passing through separate frames. In reality, it’s one image cleverly masked and framed multiple times. The result is dynamic, polished, and perfect for layouts where you want to highlight faces, hands, flowers, or movement—without adding lots of extra elements.

  • Focus on your story’s most important details
  • Crop away distractions (fences, houses, messy backgrounds)
  • Turn an “okay” photo into a layout centerpiece

See It in Action

Here are a few places this shines:

  • Family moments where an arm or hand seems to reach “through” one frame into another
  • Travel photos—highlight flowers and sunsets, skip the clutter
  • Floral studies—turn a single rose photo into a striking triptych
Vicki Robinson Interlocking Frames Sample 01
Vicki Robinson Interlocking Frames Sample 02
Vicki Robinson Interlocking Frames Sample 03

Why This Technique Works So Well

Our eyes love order and emphasis. Multiple frames create rhythm, while the overlaps add energy. By spotlighting just the good stuff—hands clasping, petals catching light, faces in motion—you simplify the story and make it more impactful. That’s the design magic.

Check out my YouTube video to see how simple this technique is — here’s a quick overview:

Quick Reference Checklist

  • Rectangular Marquee selection → Fill on a new layer (black)
  • Clip the photo to the rectangle
  • Layer Style > Stroke (white, Inside)
  • Group photo + rectangle → Duplicate groups
  • Turn off Auto Select Layer → Move the rectangle inside each group
  • Rename groups (Top, Middle, Bottom) and fine-tune overlaps

Ready to Try It?

Try the effect on one of your photos and watch your layout come to life. For coordinating supplies, take a peek at my collection The Garden Within Mega Kit → which was used to create both the sample page the video and the floral sample page above.

You’ll find other sample pages made using The Garden Within in my designer gallery.

The Garden Within Digital Scrapbooking and Art Journaling Mega Kit by Vicki Robinson

Your Turn

Will you use the Interlocking Frames Effect on your next layout? Tell me what photo you’re thinking of—travel, florals, family—and how you’ll frame it!

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2 Comments

  1. Sonya

    Love this Interlocking Frames Effect idea. Can it work in Photoshop? I don’t have PS Elements.
    Also, I went to the ‘Subscribe on YouTube’ for more tutorials like this and it said it was not available.

    Reply
    • Vicki Robinson

      So glad you liked the tutorial, Sonya! And yes! It works the same way in Photoshop! I’ve fixed the “subscribe to my YouTube channel” link. Thanks for letting me know, Xo

      Reply

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