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2 Hold down Option (Macintosh) or Alt
(Windows), and drag the selection you want to
copy and move.
Original selection Duplicate selection
To create multiple copies of a selection:
1 Select the move tool or hold down Command
(Macintosh) or Ctrl (Windows) to activate the
move tool.
2 Do one of the following: To copy the selection and offset the duplicate by
1 pixel, hold down Option (Macintosh) or Alt
(Windows), and press an arrow key. To copy the selection and offset the duplicate by
10 pixels, press Option+Shift/Alt+Shift, and press
an arrow key.
As long as you hold down Option/Alt, each press
of an arrow key creates a copy of the selection and
offsets it by the specified distance from the last
duplicate.
Copying a selection from one Photoshop
image to another
You can use the Edit > Copy and Paste commands
to copy selections between Photoshop images.
However, it is often faster and easier to drag a
selection from one Photoshop image and drop it
into another; it also saves memory by not using the
Clipboard. The drag-and-drop method requires
that both images be open, and creates a new layer
when the selection is dropped.
To copy a selection from one open
Adobe Photoshop image to another:
Select the move tool, and drag the selection from
the active image window into the destination
image window. If nothing is selected, the entire
active layer is copied. A valid drag-and-drop desti-nations
appears outlined in boldface when you
drag over it.
Selection dragged to new image
Result
Note: If you copy a selection to an image type that
does not support layers (such as an indexed-color
image), the selection is pasted as a floating selection.
CHAPTER 8 180
Editing
Copying between applications
In some cases, you can copy selections between a
Photoshop image and another application by
dragging and dropping. You can also use the Clip-board
to copy a selection in Adobe Photoshop and
paste it in another application, or vice versa.
Dragging selections between
applications
On the Macintosh, you can drag and drop images
between Adobe Photoshop and other applications
that support Macintosh Drag Manager, provided
that your system is running System 7.0. or 7.1 or
higher with the Drag Manager Extension or Sys-tem
7.5 or higher. Dragging vector artwork from
Adobe Illustrator or from other applications that
use the Illustrator Clipboard rasterizes the art-work.
To copy the artwork as a path in Adobe Pho-toshop,
hold down Command as you drag.
In Windows, you can drag and drop images from
Adobe Photoshop to other OLE-compliant appli-cations.
To duplicate an entire Photoshop image
by dragging and dropping, use the move tool to
drag the image. To copy an OLE object that con-tains
.psd data, use the OLE Clipboard; for more
information, see your Windows documentation.
Copying selections between Adobe
Photoshop and another application
A selection cut or copied using the Edit > Cut or
Edit > Copy command remains on the Clipboard
until you copy or cut another selection. By default,
when you quit Adobe Photoshop, or switch to
another application, the contents of the Clipboard
are converted to bitmap format (that is, raster-ized).
This conversion lets you paste the Clip-board’s
contents into a file created in another
application.
To save time, you can disable this automatic con-version
if you don’t plan to paste the Clipboard
contents into other applications. The automatic
conversion does not affect the pasting of selections
between Photoshop images.
To change the Export Clipboard preference:
1 Choose File > Preferences > General.
2 Do one of the following: Select Export Clipboard to save the contents of
the Clipboard upon quitting Photoshop (Macin-tosh)
or to display a prompt upon quitting Photo-shop
asking you whether to make the contents of
the Clipboard available to other applications
(Windows). Deselect Export Clipboard to delete the Clip-board
contents upon quitting the program. In
Windows, the Clipboard contents are also deleted
when you switch applications.
3 Click OK.
Pasting from another application
(Macintosh)
On the Macintosh, Adobe Photoshop lets you
paste PostScript artwork copied to the Clipboard
from applications such as Adobe Illustrator (ver-sion
5.0 and later), Adobe Dimensions, and Adobe
Streamline.
181
To paste a selection from another application to
Adobe Photoshop via the Clipboard:
1 In the supporting application, select your
artwork, and choose Edit > Copy.
2 In Adobe Photoshop, make the image active
into which you’ll paste the selection.
3 Choose Edit > Paste.
4 In the dialog box that appears, choose from the
following options: Paste as Pixels to have the artwork rasterized as it
is pasted. Rasterizing converts mathematically
defined vector artwork to the pixels displayed in
Adobe Photoshop. Paste as Paths to paste the copy as a path in the
Paths palette.
5 If you chose Paste as Pixels in the previous step,
do one of the following: Keep Anti-aliasing selected to make a smooth
transition between the edges of the selection and
the surrounding pixels. See “Using the Anti-Aliased
option” on page 154 for more informa-tion. Deselect Anti-aliasing if you want the selection
to have a crisp edge.
Note: If anti-aliasing causes ghosting, you can
remove unwanted edge pixels using the Matting
commands. For more information, see “Matting a
moved or pasted selection” on page 183.
6 Click OK.
Pasting a selection
Adobe Photoshop offers a range of pasting options
that control how the pasted selection appears in
the image. The Paste command pastes a cut or cop-ied
selection into another part of the image or into
another image as a new layer. You can then control
the opacity and blending mode of the pasted pixels
using the Layers palette. The Paste Into command
lets you paste a selection inside another selection
border, which acts as a mask for the pasted selec-tion.
Pasting using different resolutions
When you’re pasting between images that have dif-ferent
resolutions, the pasted data retains its cur-rent
pixel dimensions when pasted. This can make
the pasted contents appear out of proportion to
the new image. To match the images, use the Image
Size command to make the source and destination
images the same resolution before copying and
pasting (see page 46).
Pasting into another selection
You can paste a cut or copied selection (the source
selection) inside another selection in the image
(the destination selection). The Paste Into com-mand
pastes the source selection onto a new layer,
and converts the destination selection border into
a layer mask. You can paint on the mask to reveal
more or less of the source selection’s contents or
move the contents within the mask to reveal a dif-ferent
part. For more information, see “Using layer
masks” on page 262.
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