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This document discusses advanced blending options in Photoshop that provide more control over how layers interact with each other. It explains that double clicking a layer thumbnail opens the Layer Style dialog which contains opacity and fill sliders that control the blend. Holding option before dragging a slider splits it, allowing for smoother transitions between blend effects.
This document discusses advanced blending options in Photoshop that provide more control over how layers interact with each other. It explains that double clicking a layer thumbnail opens the Layer Style dialog which contains opacity and fill sliders that control the blend. Holding option before dragging a slider splits it, allowing for smoother transitions between blend effects.
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This document discusses advanced blending options in Photoshop that provide more control over how layers interact with each other. It explains that double clicking a layer thumbnail opens the Layer Style dialog which contains opacity and fill sliders that control the blend. Holding option before dragging a slider splits it, allowing for smoother transitions between blend effects.
Hak Cipta:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Format Tersedia
Unduh sebagai PDF, TXT atau baca online dari Scribd
Using Blend Modes is a great way to get the layer you're on to interact with the layers beneath it. The only problem is you don't have much control over these Blend Modes-they either look the way you want them to, or they don't. They're pretty much an "on" or "off" tool. If you're looking for that next level of control over how layers interact with each other, you need the advanced Blending Options. These are found by double-clicking on the layer thumbnail in the Layers palette. What appears onscreen looks like the Layer Style dialog (and in fact, it is), but if you look closely, you'll see two bars with sliders giving you control over how your layered images interact. Here's another quick tip: If you hold the Option key (PC: Alt key) before you drag one of the sliders, it will split the slider in two, which gives you smoother transitions and more usable blend effects. [View full size image]