About
layers
Photoshop layers are like sheets of
stacked acetate. You can see through transparent areas of a layer to the layers
below. You move a layer to position the content on the layer, like sliding a
sheet of acetate in a stack. You can also change the opacity of a layer to make
content partially transparent.
Transparent areas on a layer let you
see layers below.
You use layers to perform tasks such
as compositing multiple images, adding text to an image, or adding vector
graphic shapes. You can apply a layer style to add a special effect such as a
drop shadow or a glow.
Organizing
layers
A new image has a single layer. The
number of additional layers, layer effects, and layer sets you can add to an
image is limited only by your computer’s memory.
You work with layers in the Layers
panel. Layer groups help you organize and manage layers. You can use
groups to arrange your layers in a logical order and to reduce clutter in the
Layers panel. You can nest groups within other groups. You can also use groups
to apply attributes and masks to multiple layers simultaneously.
Layers
for non-destructive editing
Sometimes layers don’t contain any
apparent content. For example, an adjustment layer holds color or tonal
adjustments that affect the layers below it. Rather than edit image pixels
directly, you can edit an adjustment layer and leave the underlying pixels
unchanged.
A special type of layer, called a Smart
Object, contains one or more layers of content. You can transform (scale,
skew, or reshape) a Smart Object without directly editing image pixels. Or, you
can edit the Smart Object as a separate image even after placing it in a
Photoshop image. Smart Objects can also contain smart filter effects, which
allow you to apply filters non-destructively to images so that you can later
tweak or remove the filter effect. See Nondestructive editing.
Video
layers
You can use video layers to add
video to an image. After importing a video clip into an image as a video layer,
you can mask the layer, transform it, apply layer effects, paint on individual
frames, or rasterize an individual frame and convert it to a standard layer.
Use the Timeline panel to play the video within the image or to access
individual frames. See Supported video and image sequence formats
(Photoshop Extended).
Layers
panel overview
The Layers panel lists all layers,
layer groups, and layer effects in an image. You can use the Layers panel to
show and hide layers, create new layers, and work with groups of layers. You
can access additional commands and options in the Layers panel menu.
Photoshop Layers panel
A.
Layers panel menu
B.
Layer Group
C.
Layer
D.
Expand/Collapse Layer effects
E.
Layer effect
F.
Layer thumbnail
Display
the Layers panel
Choose
a command from the Layers panel menu
Click the triangle in the upper right corner of the
panel.
Change
the size of layer thumbnails
Choose Panel Options from the Layers panel menu, and
select a thumbnail size.
Change
thumbnail contents
Choose panel Options from the Layers panel menu, and
select Entire Document to display the contents of the entire document. Select
Layer Bounds to restrict the thumbnail to the object’s pixels on the layer.
Turn off thumbnails to improve performance and save monitor
space.
Expand
and collapse groups
Filter
layers (CC, CS6)
At the top of the Layers panel, the
filtering options help you find key layers in complex documents quickly. You
can display a subset of layers based on name, kind, effect, mode, attribute, or
color label.
Filter layers options in the Layers
panel
- Choose a filter type from the popup menu.
- Select or enter the filter criteria.
- Click the toggle switch to switch layer filtering on or
off.
Convert
background and layers
When you create a new image with a
white background or a colored background, the bottommost image in the Layers
panel is called Background. An image can have only one background layer.
You cannot change the stacking order of a background layer, its blending
mode, or its opacity. However, you can convert a background into a regular
layer, and then change any of these attributes.
When you create a new image with
transparent content, the image does not have a background layer. The bottommost
layer is not constrained like the background layer; you can move it anywhere in
the Layers panel and change its opacity and blending mode.
Convert
a background into a layer
- Double-click Background in the Layers panel, or choose
Layer > New > Layer From Background.
- Set layer options. (See Create layers and groups.)
- Click OK.
Convert
a layer into a background
- Select a layer in the Layers panel.
- Choose Layer > New > Background From
Layer.
Any
transparent pixels in the layer are converted to the background color, and the
layer drops to the bottom of the layer stack.
Note: You
cannot create a background by giving a regular layer the name, Background—you
must use the Background From Layer command.
Duplicate
layers
You can duplicate layers within an
image or into another or a new image.
Duplicate
a layer or group within an image
- Select a layer or group in the Layers panel.
- Do one of the following:
- Drag the layer or group to the Create a New Layer
button .
- Choose Duplicate Layer or Duplicate Group from the
Layers menu or the Layers panel menu. Enter a name for the layer or
group, and click OK.
Duplicate
a layer or group in another image
- Open the source and destination images.
- From the Layers panel of the source image, select one
or more layers or a layer group.
- Do one of the following:
- Drag the layer or group from the Layers panel to the
destination image.
- Select the Move tool , and drag from the source image to the destination
image. The duplicate layer or group appears above the active layer in the
Layers panel of the destination image. Shift-drag to move the image
content to the same location it occupied in the source image (if the
source and destination images have the same pixel dimensions) or to the
center of the document window (if the source and destination images have
different pixel dimensions).
- Choose Duplicate Layer or Duplicate Group from the
Layers menu or the Layers panel menu. Choose the destination document
from the Document pop‑up menu, and click OK.
- Choose Select > All to select all the pixels
on the layer, and choose Edit > Copy. Then choose Edit >
Paste in the destination image. (This method copies only pixels,
excluding layer properties such as blending mode.)
Create
a new document from a layer or group
- Select a layer or group from the Layers panel.
- Choose Duplicate Layer or Duplicate Group from the
Layers menu or the Layers panel menu.
- Choose New from the Document pop‑up menu, and
click OK.
Sample
from all visible layers
The default behavior of the Mixer
Brush, Magic Wand, Smudge, Blur, Sharpen, Paint Bucket, Clone Stamp, and
Healing Brush tools is to sample color only from pixels on the active layer.
This means you can smudge or sample in a single layer.
To smudge or sample pixels from all visible layers
with these tools, select Sample All Layers from the options bar.
Change
transparency preferences
- In Windows, choose Edit > Preferences >
Transparency & Gamut; in Mac OS, choose Photoshop >
Preferences > Transparency & Gamut.
- Choose a size and color for the transparency
checkerboard, or choose None for Grid Size to hide the transparency
checkerboard.
- Click OK.


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