No, Karen - I think I missed something. I ran through my steps again. I think the key is making your tube wider than you need it, and then resizing it after it's simplified. Make it narrower, and that seems to intensify the height. Let me see if I can walk you through it.
If I'm working with a paper that I want to be a shape, I always start with that shape and clip my paper to it. In this case I created a rectangle with the shape tool, and applied the bevel style to it. Remember to make it about 50% wider than you need and a little taller/longer (because you're going to trim the ends) Now I don't use Layer -> Layer Styles -> Scale Effects as you did. To set my bevel, I double click on the little "fx" on the layer in my layers palette. That brings up a window like this:
Tube Bevel Settings.jpg (53.68K)
Number of downloads: 23
This is a simple inner bevel. As I said previously, I adjusted the slider increasing the size of the bevel until it seemed to "meet" softly in the middle. These are the final settings.
At this point I'll bring in a paper, and clip it to the shape. The paper takes the bevel effect of the shape. You can move your paper around until you get the pattern placed where you want it to be. When I'm satisfied, merge the two layers together. This will simplify the layer.
Now I used my rectangular marquee tool to select each end and delete that portion. This trims the bevel from the ends.
At this point you need to make your tube narrower. This is the part I missed above. Now this will distort your paper slightly, so you may want to adjust that in the previous step, widening your paper. Make sure you resize it by grabbing the side edges, not the corners. Now you can apply a shadow. I started with the gray large style from
ScrapSimple Tools - Styles: Basic Shadows 6501, but I adjusted the settings a bit. Here are my shadow settings:
Tube Shadow Settings.jpg (57.64K)
Number of downloads: 39
Here is a screenshot showing my shape in the original size with the bevel applied next to the final product:
Tube.jpg (386K)
Number of downloads: 40
I used papers from Brandy's
Ruby Collection.
Play around with this. This is not a hard and fast technique - just the result of playing around myself.
If I do this again, I may duplicate the rolled layer, put it beneath the original, reduce the size a tiny bit and move it a pixel lower. It might give it more dimension, as if you could see a little bit of the inside of the roll.
Hmm... Any designers out there? A template would be cool!