by Ira » Sat Jun 03, 2006 5:44 pm
Before anything...
From the "Window" or "View" pull-down, make sure you have "View Layers" or "Layers Window" selected. (The difference has to do with the version of Photoshop tha you're using.)
From THAT little window, you select "New Layer," and you give it the name of your choice.
You then make sure that this NEW layer is selected before you add type ("T" tool), play with rules, arrows, or do anything else funky. Just click onits name in the list to make it the active layer.
Otherwise, you'll be drawing directly on the original image, which is now considered the "background" layer. By doing this stuff on a NEW layer(s), you can screw up as much as you want without affecting the main image. So if you DO want to do something on the main image, you have to SELECT it in the layers window (pallette). Otherwise, anything you do will affect that NEW layer you just created.
If you screw up, you can either delete the entire new layer without affecting your main image, or "select all" and delete, while keeping that new layer and the name you gave it.
When you're DONE with all of this fun, you then select "Flatten," to convert the two layers ONE layer, and then save in the file format of your choice...which will most likely be JPEG.
And you can make as many of these additional layers as you want before flattening, which is a good idea. Because you can now move the into precise positions independent of each other.
Here we go again!