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Post by whippet on Jun 3, 2019 20:04:05 GMT
My picture.
I used the red house image as background. Then I put the garden and gates on top.
I turned the opacity of that layer down, while I erased parts of it. After I flattened the image, the layer had stayed at the low opacity. Yet I am sure the reading had gone back to 100% before I flattened it.
This has happened to me a couple of times previously.
Have I just forgotten to put it back up to 100%?
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Post by Major Major on Jun 3, 2019 20:14:19 GMT
Whippet -
As far as I know, flattening an image will not affect the opacity of any layers. So unless you reset it manually, it stayed at the lower opacity
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Post by whippet on Jun 5, 2019 19:47:48 GMT
Guess I must have forgotten to do it.
Many thanks.
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Post by cats4jan on Jun 6, 2019 12:35:58 GMT
Sometimes the flattened image looks a slight bit different to me - but I'm guessing it's a jpg vs psd thing - rather than anything else. However, it never affects opacity to the point where the layer goes back to being totally opaque.
But, then again, the computer gremlins do really weird things - at least, they do to me. LOL
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Post by Bailey on Jun 7, 2019 1:15:35 GMT
Sometimes the flattened image looks a slight bit different to me - but I'm guessing it's a jpg vs psd thing When you flatten an image and remain in the PSE editor the image you see on the screen is neither a jpg, psd or any other format. The image is simply the colour data for each pixel that is currently stored in your computer's RAM, basically 1's and 0's. It's only when you save the image data in the RAM to your hard disk that the data is saved in whatever format you choose - jpg, psd etc
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Post by whippet on Jun 11, 2019 19:23:56 GMT
Glad I am not alone in this, Janice. The computer gremlins love playing havoc with me.
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