Layers are critical to working with Photoshop.
First!!! Read through this tutorial - then after you will make this tutorial.
The
image you see is a view from above, like looking down at a paper scrapbook layout.
(like seeing the bread only from a sandwich)
The Layers Palette is looking at those layers from the side. (like the
side layers of a sandwich)
Just as papers and photos on a paper page are layers
and can be moved and overlapped independently from one another, digital
scrapbook pages have the same layers.
The explanatory image in (Figure 1) has 5 layers: the white background,
and each of the 4 shapes is one layer.
fig 1 =>
The view of the example image is from above, as if looking down on a
piece of white paper with four colored paper shapes on it. The view in the
Layers Palette on the right is like looking at the side of the layer
stack, with the white paper (Background) as the lowest layer, and
the shapes on top of it.
The active layer is highlighted in the Layers
Palette, as Layer 3 is blue in figure 2.5 above, and a paintbrush icon appears in the empty box between the Eye
icon and the Layer Thumbnail.
Using the Move Tool to rearrange the
shape layers, we can see how each layer remains separate and distinct,
independent of the surrounding layers.
Placing each shape near the center of the white paper shows that the
green triangle is the uppermost layer, with the black square beneath it,
followed by the red heart, then the orange circle, as reflected in the
stacking order in the Layers Palette.
fig 2 =>
To reorder the layer stacking order, simply click and drag any layer in
the Layers Palette to a different location, or go to Layer>Arrange and
choose a new location, or use the keyboard shortcuts of Ctrl + [ or ] to
move each layer one position up or down at a time.
fig 3 =>
Dragging a layer to a different stacking order affects the way it
interacts with the layers around it. In the example, the green triangle on
top is dragged beneath the other shapes, so is no longer completely
visible, but obscured by the higher layers. The new position of the
triangle is visible in the Layers Palette.
fig 4 =>
The image information isn't lost if overlapped by something else, as
demonstrated with the black square.
When separate, the entire shape was
visible. When covered by the green triangle, it was no longer visible, but
the information was not lost because when the triangle was placed below
it, the black square became completely visible again.
If this image was
actual paper on a desk, imagine moving the paper shapes around,
overlapping them in various ways. The same concept is evident in digital
layers.
Now you will do it...
1. Go to the Module Desktop Shortcuts and open Photoshop Elements.
2. Start From Scratch.
3. choose these settings

4. Create 4 different shapes on 4 different layers as seen in above tutorial (Shapes and colors do not need to match)
5. To make a shape you will need to choose the "Custom Shape Tool"

6. Choose custom shape then choose a shape!

7. Insert by drawing it on a new layer..
8. Create for each layer 4 total & label each layer!!!
9. Save your file as save it as a ( .PSD ) and as a ( .JPG ) Files
- - - - - Use as a file name "(your TechLab number) Your LastName Activity 3 Layers" [ex. 1945MaguireActivity 3Layers]
- - - - - Save this file in the [Module# digital scrapbooking folder] located inside your Module desktop Shortcuts Folder (ex. 14 Digital Scrapbooking)
RUBRIC: Must Have = 4 separate layers overlapping each other &
4 different objects Like Below
(they do not have to be these shapes - you choose)
Overlap your pictures..
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