Being able to hide the path outline was possible in Photoshop CS5, but it’s so handy it deserves to be mentioned again here. Making a vector layer visible or clicking on the canvas with the Path Selection or Direct Selection tool will bring back the path outline, as will hitting Command-shift-H a second time. Hiding the Target Path works almost all of the time, even when the Color Picker or Gradient Fill window is open (but surprisingly, not when the Gradient Editor window is open). Drag through the eye column to change the visibility of multiple items in the Layers panel. If you don’t change the visibility of any other layer, Alt-clicking (Windows) or Option-clicking (Mac OS) the same eye icon restores the original visibility settings. The same works with option to subtract and shift-option to intersect.Ĭommand-shift-H hides the Target Path, making it far easier to edit effects like inner shadow, that are near the edge of a vector shape. Photoshop remembers the visibility states of all layers before hiding them. When using the vector tools to draw a shape, you can hold shift (then click and start drawing) to add the shape to the current layer. It's also worth noting that some of the options have moved, like snap to pixels (this is now a global preferences setting). ![]() ![]() So the only big difference is that you'll have to select the ellipse tool from the tools panel, rather than the options bar. ![]() The shape options are now under a single dropdown menu.Īnd, boolean operations are now under a single icon. All the shape and boolean operations are still there. From left to right, these buttons are as follows: link layers, layer styles, add layer mask, new fill or adjustment layer, new group, new layer and delete layer.
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