Concept of layers in Photoshop.

Paridhi Artography

Adobe Photoshop is a powerful image editing software that offers a wide range of features and tools for manipulating and enhancing images. One of the key features of Photoshop is the concept of layers, which allows you to work with different elements of an image independently. Here are some commonly used layers in Photoshop.

1. Background Layer: When you open an image in Photoshop, it is automatically placed on the background layer. The background layer is usually the bottommost layer and is locked by default. You can unlock it to convert it into a regular layer.

2. Image Layers:  These are the layers that contain the actual image content. Each layer can have different elements, such as text, shapes, or adjustments. You can add multiple image layers on top of each other to build complex compositions.

3. Adjustment Layers: Adjustment layers allow you to apply non-destructive adjustments to the layers below them. Some common adjustment layers include levels, curves, hue/saturation, and color balance. These adjustments affect all the layers below them in the layer stack.

4. Text Layers:  Text layers are used to add and edit text in your compositions. You can create text layers to add titles, captions, or any other textual elements to your images. Text layers have their own properties, such as font, size, color, and style.

5. Shape Layers:  Shape layers are used to create and edit vector-based shapes, such as rectangles, circles, polygons, and custom shapes. You can apply various styles, gradients, and effects to shape layers.

6. Fill Layers:  Fill layers allow you to add solid colors, gradients, or patterns to your compositions. They are similar to shape layers but do not have a visible outline or stroke.

7. Adjustment Layer Masks:  Each adjustment layer comes with an associated layer mask. Layer masks allow you to selectively control the visibility of the adjustment by painting with black, white, or shades of gray. Black conceals the adjustment, white reveals it, and gray provides partial visibility.

8. Smart Objects:  Smart objects are layers that contain embedded raster or vector data. They preserve the original image or object, allowing you to perform non-destructive transformations and adjustments. Smart objects can be resized, rotated, and filtered without losing image quality.

These are just a few examples of the many types of layers you can work with in Photoshop. Layers provide flexibility and control in editing and composing images, enabling you to make precise adjustments and create complex compositions.