Hello, I'm seeking the wisdom of the people at polycount once again.
My question is: Is there a simple way to merge layers that have blending options on them, without disrupting the effect they are having?
Here is a hypothetical scenario I am making up.
To better explain:
Layer 1 is a gray filled box
Layer 2 has some shadows and highlights painted on with 40% Opacity
Layer 3 has a a texture placed on top with the blending option Overlay at 50% Opacity
Lets say you wanted to merge layer 2 and 3 to simplify things a bit, or edit both on the same layer with the smudge brush or something.
If you merge layer 3 to 2 (cntrl E) It losses the Overlay blending option that you set.
Is there a way to apply this blending option in advance so its state is set back to Normal so you can then merge layers?
Or is it possibly to simply merge the two without effecting the blending that was taking place.
Hope this makes sense, its just an issue I have never found a solution to in Photoshop.
Thanks in advance.
Replies
ctrl+a (this selects everything) then
ctrl+shift+c (copies all the layers into one image) then
ctrl+v (pastes)
It copies everything you have on the document and then will paste it all on top as a new layer.
Hope it helps...
Added: Also make sure you are on have the top layer selected when you do that or it may paste it in between layers and looks like it does nothing.
Your two options are merging everything underneath what you really need, or using a lot of layer sets.
When you do what I said it puts a new layer on top of everything, you work on it dont like it, you delete the layer and try again. never lose any layers. and then I will clean up layers at the end. Merging and consolidating and whatnot.
but hey my texturing needs work anyways so maybe I need to change my work flow :P
Quokimbo: I think that was the solution I had heard about before, only I forgot the shortcut, and honestly don't know if there is a way to copy everything on all layers without using that shortcut (like something in the menus you can navigate to).
Anyways thanks for letting me know about the best possible solution.
Slum: At least I know now there isn't an exact solution to what I had in mind, Quokimbo's method will work just fine for now.
Much appreciated everyone!