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Tuesday 16 August 2011

Photoshop Layers - The Background Layer IN PHOTOSHOP UPDATES

FINAL PREVIEW

The photo appears in front of the frame in the document. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com

In the previous tutorial, we learned the essential skills for working with layers inside Photoshop's Layers panel. We learned how to add new layers, delete layers, move layers above and below each other, how to add adjustment layers and layer styles, change a layer's blend mode and transparency level, and much more, all from within the Layers panel! But before we get into more of the amazing things we can do with layers, there's one special type of layer we need to look at, and that's the Background layer. The reason we need to learn about it is because there's a few things we can do with normal layers that we can't do with the Background layer, and if we're not aware of them ahead of time, they can easily lead to confusion and frustration.
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Here's an image of a photo frame that I've just opened in Photoshop. The image is available from the Fotolia image library:
A photo frame image. Image licensed from Fotolia by Photoshop Essentials.com
The original image.
Whenever we open a new image in Photoshop, it opens inside its own document and Photoshop places the image on its own layer named Background, as we can see by looking in my Layers panel. Notice that the word Background is written in italics, which is Photoshop's way of telling us there's something special about this particular layer:
The Background layer in the Layers panel in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The Layers panel showing the image on the Background layer.
Photoshop names this layer Background for the simple reason that it serves as the background for our document. Any additional layers we add to the document will appear above the Background layer. Since its whole purpose is to serve as a background, there's a few things Photoshop won't allow us to do with it. Let's take a quick look at these few simple rules we need to remember. Then, at the end of the tutorial, we'll learn an easy way to get around every single one of them!

Rule 1: We Can't Move The Contents Of A Background Layer

One of the things we can't do with a Background layer is move its contents. Normally, to move the contents of a layer, we grab the Move Tool from the top of the Tools panel:
Photoshop Move Tool. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Selecting the Move Tool from the Tools panel.
Then we simply click with the Move Tool inside the document and drag the contents around with our mouse. Watch what happens, though, when I try to drag the photo frame to a different location. Photoshop pops open a dialog box telling me it can't move the contents because the layer is locked:
Could not complete your request because the layer is locked. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Instead of moving the photo frame, Photoshop informs me that the layer is locked.
If we look again at the Background layer in my Layers panel, we can see a small lock icon, letting us know that sure enough, this layer is locked in place and we can't move it. There's no way to unlock a Background layer, but as I said, at the end of the tutorial, we'll see how to get around this little rule of not being able to move its contents, as well as how to get around the other rules we're about to look at:
The lock icon on the Background layer in the Layers panel in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The lock icon lets us know that some aspect of this layer is locked.

Rule 2: No Transparent Pixels

In a moment, I'm going to import another image into my document and place it inside my photo frame, but the center of the frame is currently filled with white, which means I need to delete that white area before I can place my photo inside of it. Normally, when we delete pixels on a layer, the deleted area becomes transparent, allowing us to see through it to the layer(s) below. Let's see what happens, though, when I try to delete something on the Background layer.
First, I need to select the area inside the frame, and since it's filled with solid white, I'll use the Magic Wand Tool. In Photoshop CS2 and earlier, we can select the Magic Wand just by clicking on its icon in the Tools panel. In Photoshop CS3 and higher (I'm using Photoshop CS5 here), the Magic Wand is hiding behind the Quick Selection Tool, so click on the Quick Selection Tool and hold your mouse button down for a second or two until a fly-out menu appears showing the other tool(s) nested behind it, then select the Magic Wand Tool from the list:
Selecting the Magic Wand Tool from the Tools panel in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Selecting the Magic Wand Tool.
With the Magic Wand Tool in hand, I'll click anywhere inside the center of the frame to instantly select the entire white area. A selection outline appears around the edges letting me know the area is selected:
Selecting the inside of the frame with the Magic Wand Tool. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The white area inside the frame is now selected.
To delete the area inside the frame, I'll press Backspace (Win) / Delete (Mac) on my keyboard, but instead of deleting the area and replacing it with transparency as we'd expect on a normal layer, Photoshop mysteriously pops open the Fill dialog box so I can choose a different color to fill the area with:
The Fill dialog box in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Instead of deleting the area, Photoshop pops open the Fill dialog box.
I'll click Cancel to close out of the Fill dialog box since that wasn't at all what I wanted to do. What I wanted to do was delete the white area inside the frame, not fill it with a different color. Maybe Photoshop just got confused, so I'll try something different. I'll go up to the Edit menu in the Menu Bar along the top of the screen and choose Cut:
Selecting Cut from the Edit menu in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Selecting Cut from the Edit menu.
On a normal layer, this would cut the selected area from the layer, leaving a transparent area in its place, yet once again, we get an unexpected result. This time, as if its purposely messing with me, Photoshop fills the area with black:
The area inside the photo frame has been filled with black. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The white area inside the frame is now filled with black.
Say what? Where did the black come from? As it turns out, Photoshop filled the area with black because if we look at my Foreground and Background color swatches near the bottom of the Tools panel, we see that my Background color (the lower right swatch) is currently set to black, and Photoshop filled the area with the Background color. If my Background color had been set to purple, it would have filled the area with purple. It just happened to be set to black:
The Background color swatch in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The Foreground (upper left) and Background (lower right) color swatches.
So why won't Photoshop delete the white area inside the frame? Why does it keep wanting to fill it with a different color instead? The reason is because Background layers don't support transparency. After all, since the Background layer is supposed to be the background of the document, there shouldn't be any need to see through it because there shouldn't be anything behind it to see. The background is, after all, the background! No matter how I try, I will never be able to delete the area inside the center of the frame as long as the image remains on the Background layer. How, then, will I be able to display another photo inside the frame? Let's leave this problem alone for the time being. We'll come back to it a bit later.

Rule 3: We Can't Move The Background Layer Above Another Layer

Here's the photo I want to place inside my photo frame. This image is also available from the Fotolia image library:
The photo that will be placed inside the frame. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The image that will be placed inside the frame.
The image is currently open inside its own document window, so I'll quickly copy it into the photo frame's document by pressing Ctrl+A (Win) / Command+A (Mac) to select the entire photo, then I'll press Ctrl+C (Win) / Command+C (Mac) to copy the image to the clipboard. I'll switch over to the photo frame's document, then I'll press Ctrl+V (Win) / Command+V (Mac) to paste the image into the document. Photoshop places the image on a new layer named "Layer 1" above the photo frame on the Background layer:
The Layers panel showing the photo added above the Background layer. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The second photo is placed on its own layer above the Background layer.
And we can see the new photo appearing in front of the frame in the document window:
The photo appears in front of the frame in the document. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The second image appears in front of the photo frame.
In order for my second photo to appear inside the frame, I need to rearrange the order of the layers in the Layers panel so that the frame appears above the photo. Normally, moving one layer above another is as easy as clicking on the layer we need to move and dragging it above the other layer, but that's not the case when the layer we need to move is the Background layer. When I click on the Background layer and try dragging it above the photo on Layer 1, Photoshop displays a circle icon with a diagonal line through it (the international "not gonna happen" symbol), letting me know that for some reason, it's not going to let me do it:
Attempting to drag the Background layer above Layer 1 in the Layers panel. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The circle with the diagonal line through it tells me I can't drag the Background layer above Layer 1.
The reason it won't let me drag the Background layer above Layer 1 is because the Background layer must always remain the background of the document. Photoshop won't allow us to move it above any other layers.

SR:PHOTOESSITIONAL

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