If you choose one of those arrangements for your images and want to get back to our regular view, go under that same menu and select ‘Consolidate All To Tabs.” You choose these document “arrangements” by going under Photoshop’s Window menu, under Arrange, and making your choice there (I chose 3-up Vertical). By the way – there is a Photoshop feature that puts your images side-by-side on screen like this (it just resizes your documents so they fit on screen either horizontally or vertically, as I did here). I’m making them available for you to download if you want to follow along using the same images, but I encourage you to use three of your own images. Let’s open the three images we’re going to put together (seen here). We’ll start by blending three images together, creating a collage (or a montage, or whatever you call it). However, they still allow you to do things you can’t do in Lightroom, so they are definitely worth knowing, and they open a whole new world of Layers possibilities, so this is still really big important stuff. Today we’re talking about using Layer Masks (finally!), which are fantastic, but now that there are a bunch of new masking features inside of Lightroom, you probably won’t have to use Layer Masks as often as you would have before. This week wraps up the Layers portion of our Photoshop journey, so next week, we’ll open a new can of worms…er, I mean some other important Photoshop features. Welcome back once again and by now, you’re probably getting a little tired of the whole learning Layers thing, but I have good news.
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