Yes, any adjustment layers from the list, in any number, can be mix and match. They don't need to be of the same kind. They can be simple layers or included in layer groups, as well. In the case of layer groups the resulted curve won't be made in the topmost position, but above the simple layers in the document (this could be below some groups).Also, can this be used to mix and match different adjustment layers? Like combining one Curves and one Levels, etc or do they have to be of same kind.
:Niranjan.
Yes, me too. That's the power of the pen-curve adjustment. I have ignored this adjustment till now but it seems it's the most powerful of all the PS adjustments.I am intrigued by the fact that all these different types of adjustment layers can be translated in to one Curves layer...
:Niranjan.
Applying Hue and Saturation as well as Vibrance or Selective Color to a grayscale-only image in PS, even if in RGB mode, let the image unchanged in most situations. You can test it with a B&W image opened in PS in RGB mode and you'll see the changes Hue and Saturation, Vibrance and Selective Color produce on it. Only if the Lightness slider is moved from the middle the other sliders would make changes in the image. This difference between how this adjustments work on a B&W image and on a coloured one in PS is quite strange. One would expect that on a B&W image opened in the RGB mode in PS changing the reds saturation and lightness with Hue and Saturation would produce a color change. Well, it doesn't.
Things get even stranger with the Selective Color Adjustment on the same image: select any color (except for white, gray and black) , move all the sliders as you wish and you'll see no changes in the B&W image opened in RGB mode. This strange PS behavior is the reason of what you have observed.
This would be normal for the R, G and B channels in the RGB mode. Changes to, let's say R channel won't affect at all the G and B channels. But, at least to me, it's strange that blacks show the same behavior, as there is no Black channel. A shade of gray should be a mixture of the R,G and B channels (equal R, G and B values) and therefore it should be affected by changes in each of them. It looks like, IMO, the mentioned PS adjustments are considering the RGB image as RGBK.
Hi Richard,
I have uploaded it again. The link is :
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1wLyuCAhzPdqdhZU_fESAS4JdMXujcOSY/view?usp=sharing
I hope it works now.
Thanks for the speedy response Dan.
Will try it shortly.
Richard
Hi Richard,
I have uploaded it again. The link is :
I hope it works now.
Regards,
Dan
HI RICHARD.
I wrote the script. Sorry, no CMYK version yet, but a CMYK version is possible.
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