Adobe 13101332 User Guide - Page 170

Using drag and drop to copy between applications, To paste one selection into another Photoshop

Page 170 highlights

Adobe Photoshop Help Using Help | Contents | Index Selecting Back 170 • To copy the selection and offset the duplicate by 10 pixels, press Alt+Shift (Windows) or Option+Shift (Mac OS), and press an arrow key. As long as you hold down Alt or Option, each press of an arrow key creates a copy of the selection and offsets it by the specified distance from the last duplicate. To paste one selection into another (Photoshop): 1 Cut or copy the part of the image you want to paste. 2 Select the part of the image into which you want to paste the selection.The source selection and the destination selection can be in the same image or in two different Photoshop images. 3 Choose Edit > Paste Into.The contents of the source selection appear masked by the destination selection. In the Layers palette, the layer thumbnail for the source selection appears next to the layer mask thumbnail for the destination selection. The layer and layer mask are unlinked- that is, you can move each one independently. Source selection pasted into destination selection For more information on editing layer masks, see "Applying and discarding layer masks" on page 318. 4 Select the move tool , or hold down the Ctrl (Windows) or Command (Mac OS) key to activate the move tool. Then drag the source contents until the part you want appears through the mask. 5 To reveal more or less of the image underlying the layer, click the layer mask thumbnail in the Layers palette, select a painting tool, and edit the mask: • To hide more of the image underlying the layer, paint the mask with black. • To reveal more of the image underlying the layer, paint the mask with white. • To partially reveal the image underlying the layer, paint the mask with gray. 6 If you are satisfied with your results, you can choose Layer > Merge Down to merge the new layer and layer mask with the underlying layer and make the changes permanent. Using drag and drop to copy between applications The drag-and-drop feature lets you copy and move images between Photoshop or ImageReady and other applications. Using Help | Contents | Index Back 170

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U
sing H
elp
|
C
on
t
en
ts
|
Inde
x
B
ack
170
Adobe Photoshop Help
Selecting
U
sing H
elp
|
C
on
t
en
ts
|
Inde
x
B
ack
170
To copy the selection and offset the duplicate by 10 pixels, press Alt+Shift (Windows) or
Option+Shift (Mac OS), and press an arrow key.
As long as you hold down Alt or Option, each press of an arrow key creates a copy of the
selection and offsets it by the specified distance from the last duplicate.
To paste one selection into another (Photoshop):
1
Cut or copy the part of the image you want to paste.
2
Select the part of the image into which you want to paste the selection. The source
selection and the destination selection can be in the same image or in two different
Photoshop images.
3
Choose Edit > Paste Into. The contents of the source selection appear masked by the
destination selection.
In the Layers palette, the layer thumbnail for the source selection appears next to the layer
mask thumbnail for the destination selection. The layer and layer mask are unlinked—
that is, you can move each one independently.
Source selection pasted into destination selection
For more information on editing layer masks, see
A
pplying and disc
ar
ding la
y
er masks
on page
318
.
4
Select the move tool
, or hold down the Ctrl (Windows) or Command (Mac OS) key
to activate the move tool. Then drag the source contents until the part you want appears
through the mask.
5
To reveal more or less of the image underlying the layer, click the layer mask thumbnail
in the Layers palette, select a painting tool, and edit the mask:
To hide more of the image underlying the layer, paint the mask with black.
To reveal more of the image underlying the layer, paint the mask with white.
To partially reveal the image underlying the layer, paint the mask with gray.
6
If you are satisfied with your results, you can choose Layer > Merge Down to merge the
new layer and layer mask with the underlying layer and make the changes permanent.
Using drag and drop to copy between applications
The drag-and-drop feature lets you copy and move images between Photoshop or
ImageReady and other applications.