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Adobe Photoshop CS3 User Manual

Page 266

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PHOTOSHOP CS3

User Guide

259

Copy a selection

1

Select the area you want to copy.

2

Choose Edit > Copy, or Edit > Copy Merged.

Copy a selection while dragging

1

Select the Move tool

, or hold down Ctrl (Windows) or Command (Mac OS) to activate the Move tool.

2

Hold down Alt (Windows) or Option (Mac OS), and drag the selection you want to copy and move.

When copying between images, drag the selection from the active image window into the destination image window.
If nothing is selected, the entire active layer is copied. As you drag the selection over another image window, a border
highlights the window if you can drop the selection into it.

Dragging a selection into another image

Create multiple copies of a selection within an image

1

Select the Move tool

, or hold down Ctrl (Windows) or Command (Mac OS) to activate the Move tool.

2

Copy the selection:

Hold down Alt (Windows) or Option (Mac OS), and drag the selection.

To copy the selection and offset the duplicate by 1 pixel, hold down Alt or Option, and press an arrow key.

To copy the selection and offset the duplicate by 10 pixels, press Alt+Shift (Windows) or Option+Shift (Mac OS),
and press an arrow key.

As long as you hold down Alt or Option, each press of an arrow key creates a copy of the selection and offsets it by
the specified distance from the last duplicate. In this case, the copy is made on the same layer.

Paste one selection into another

1

Cut or copy the part of the image you want to paste.

2

Select the part of the image into which you want to paste the selection. The source selection and the destination

selection can be in the same image or in two different Photoshop images.

3

Choose Edit > Paste Into. The contents of the source selection appear within the destination selection.

The Paste Into operation adds a layer and layer mask to the image. In the Layers palette, the new layer contains a layer
thumbnail for the pasted selection next to a layer mask thumbnail. The layer mask is based on the selection you
pasted into: the selection is unmasked (white), the rest of the layer is masked (black). The layer and layer mask are
unlinked—that is, you can move each one independently.