|  Preserved Topic: Adjustment-layer on a layerset...  | |
|---|---|
| Author | Thread | 
| Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Helsingborg, Sweden |  posted 12-28-2002 19:07 Isn't there a way to create an adjustment-layer  | 
| Maniac (V) Inmate From:  Eagleshieldsbay, Sweden |  posted 12-28-2002 19:23 hmm... try to put the adjustment layer as the top-most-layer in the layerset. | 
| Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: A˛, MI, USA |  posted 12-28-2002 19:53 If you want an adjustment layer to affect just the layer below it, hold alt and click on the line between the two layers in the palette. That's called a clipping group. | 
| Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Milwaukee |  posted 12-28-2002 21:39 Put the adjustment layer into a clipping group. After creating the adjustment layer, put it directly above the layer you want it to affect, then hold Alt/Option while clicking on the boundary between the two layers (in the Layers palette). | 
| Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Helsingborg, Sweden |  posted 12-28-2002 21:47 Yeah, clipping-groups did the trick. Thanks! =) | 
| Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Milwaukee |  posted 12-28-2002 23:23 Clipping groups are another one of those Photoshop features that isn't particularly obvious -- and furthermore, it doesn't really leap right out of the manual, and many Photoshop books don't make a big deal of out it -- so that you can spend years and years with Photoshop without ever knowing about them. I'm constantly being surprised by little things like that. | 
| Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Helsingborg, Sweden |  posted 12-29-2002 13:39 Yeah, and it is a bit weird technique too. | 
| Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Helsingborg, Sweden |  posted 12-29-2002 13:41 ..about the "weird" technique.. I meant that, | 
| Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Mpls, MN |  posted 12-29-2002 14:49 Well the idea for clipping groups stems from there use in postscript also invented by Adobe, Postscript is a stack based language similar to lisp. |