![]() ![]() If I have to redo the whole mask everytime I add pixels or shapes to the group, or every time I want to move them, then I think it's just not working the way clipping masks should ! Especially because in real production, it's never just 3 circles but a bunch more shapes, or complex drawings like the one Neil showed here (and really, it's basic stuff but I want to be move them and have the clipping layer match the group in real time).īut I really appreciate what you guys are proposing as solutions, it's just not what we're after. That's a perfect exemple ! I just want the devs to be aware that it is really a important feature that's currently missing from both Photo and Designer and it would improve the workflow a lot if we didn't have to resolve to workarounds with duplicated layers or masks. I rarely use simple shapes that could be vectors, the layers and groups are usually complex painted elements: Thanks, but the example I gave is just a simple example to show the idea. As it is currently you would have to delete the childs after pasting the patch copied from the high frequency layer. I will pass this feedback over to the dev team to see if this can be streamlined - if we could copy just the data from the parent layer (the high frequency layer) it would work fine. Notice none have the crop tool icon over the thumbnails. In the screenshot below you can see i have added to patches between the person and the layers panel (the one on the top is selected in the Layers panel) and both are children (clipped) of the high frequency layer. There's however another issue: if you copy a second patch from the high frequency layer, Affinity copies the patch as well as all clipped childs. If did correctly the crop symbol you see over the thumbnail should NOT appear. To clip it drag the patch layer over the high frequency layer in the Layers panel ( not over its thumbnail which is what you did in your screenshot above but over the rest of the layer to the right). Hi your post here it's not working because you haven't clipped the corrective patch - you have nested it and used it as a mask inadvertently. I'm getting by just fine using destructive editing to heal and stamp which works really, really well, but I would like this feature to be easier. What occurs in Affinity Photo is creating a new mask which only shows my patch. these can be stacked easily in Photoshop by making a selection, copy, paste and drag to cover, set to normal blend mode and clip to the high freq layer. In Freq Sep retouching you need take patches of the high freq, like skin or clothing texture and use that to patch other areas non-destructively. Yes sir, I figured out how to do it but what you can't do simply is use it for frequency separation. Like for example I have 5 people in the background, each on their own layer, and I want to group them and then apply a non-destructive color correction layer to all of them at the same time.Īnyways, thanks for the wishlist support! Unlike photoshop where the clipping mask is above the main layer and indented, you drag it just below the layer and it shows up indented there.īut I tend to keep a lot of layers. ![]()
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