In the Layers panel of the source image, select the layer that you want to copy. Do one of the following: Choose Select > All to select all of the pixels in the layer, and choose Edit > Copy. Then make the destination image active, and choose Edit > Paste. Drag the layer's name from the Layers panel of the source image into the destination Selecting the Move Tool. Make sure the "Background copy" layer is selected in the Layers panel. Hold down your Shift key, then click on the photo and drag it over to the right side of the original image. Holding the Shift key as you drag will limit the direction you can move, making it easy to drag straight across. You can now copy and paste layers in Photoshop—inside a document and between documents. Depending on your color management settings and the color profile associated with the file (or imported data), Photoshop may prompt you for directions to handle color information in the imported data. 1 Correct answer. Ann_Shelbourne1 • Participant , Feb 06, 2009. If you go to Window menu/Arrange/"Float all in Windows": the images will no longer in Tabs, you will be able to drag-copy the layers between the different images. 1 Upvote. To access the Quick Export As option, do either of the following: Navigate to File > Export > Quick Export As [image format]. Go to the Layers panel. Select the layers, layer groups, or artboards you want to export. Right-click your selection and choose Quick Export As [image format] from the context menu. Click or click and drag across the visibility icon on each of the layers to hide them. Roll back to the previous version of Photoshop If none of the above suggestions help, back up your preferences/settings folder then roll back to the previous version of Photoshop (either 22.0.1 or 21.1.4) .

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