„Layer Groups“ enable you to group layers together in a hierarchical structure. This will make it easier to manage your project if you have many layers.
You can create a layer group by clicking the Layers Dialog, by using the menu command → , or through the Layers dialog context menu.
button at the bottom of theThis new empty layer group appears just above the current layer. It is recommended to give it a descriptive name. To change the layer group name, double-click the name, press F2, or right-click the layer and select Edit Layer Attributes from the context menu. If you don't rename your layer groups, you can get confused when several groups have been created with names such as Layer Group #1, Layer Group #2, etc.
You can create multiple layer groups and you can embed them, that is include a layer group in another one.
You can add existing layers to a layer group by click-and-dragging them.
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The hand representing the mouse pointer must turn smaller before releasing the mouse button. A thin horizontal line marks where the layer will be inserted. |
To add a new layer to the current layer group, click the button at the bottom of the Layers dialog, use the command in the main menu, or press Shift+Ctrl+N.
When a layer group is not empty, a small icon appears. By clicking it, you can fold or unfold the group.
Layers that belong to a layer group are slightly indented to the right, allowing you to easily see which layers are part of the group.
If a layer group is made invisible using the eye icon but still open (so that the layers inside the group are shown in the list), there is a struck out eye shown besides the layers that are inside the group to indicate that these layers are not displayed in the final projection of the image, but theoretically visible in the layer group.
You can raise and lower layer groups in the Layers dialog as you do with normal layers: click-and-dragging, and by using up arrow and down arrow keys at the bottom of the Layers dialog.
To duplicate a layer group, click the Duplicate Layers command in the pop up context menu.
button or right-click and select theYou can move a layer group to another image by click-and-dragging. You can also copy-paste it using Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V: then, you get a floating selection that you must anchor ( anchor button at the bottom of the Layers Dialog).
You can also move a layer group to the canvas: this duplicates the group in the group. Select the layer group, select the Move tool, then, in the image, move the layer. That's one way to multiply multi-layer objects in an image.
To delete one or more layer groups, click the icon button on the bottom of the Layers dialog, or drag and drop the selected layer groups on top of that button, or use the Delete Layers command from the main menu or from the Layers dialog context menu.
When a layer group is activated, you can add another group inside it with the „Add New Layer Group“ command. There seems to be no limit, except memory, to the number of embedded layer groups.
A layer mode applied to a layer group acts on layers that are in this group only. A layer mode above a layer group acts on all layers underneath, outside and inside the layer groups.
Layer groups have a special layer mode: the Pass Through mode. This mode exists only if a layer group is active.
When this mode is used instead of any other one, layers inside the layer group will behave as if they were a part of the layer stack, not belonging to the group. Layers within the group blend with layers below, inside and outside the group.
While with Normal mode, layers within a group are treated as if they were a single layer, which is then blended with other layers below in the stack; a modifier on a layer inside the group blends layers below in the group only.
More details about Pass Through in Pass-through .
When a layer group is activated, opacity changes are applied to all the layers of the group.
Masks are also available on layer groups. They work similarly to ordinary layer masks, with the following considerations.
The layer group’s mask size is the same as the combined size of all its children at all times. When the group’s size changes, the mask is cropped to the new size — areas of the mask that fall outside of the new bounds are discarded, and newly added areas are filled with black (and hence are transparent by default).
Of course, you still can add a layer mask to a layer in the group to mask a part of the layer.
When working with a lot of layers, finding a particular layer in the list can be difficult. To find the layer to which an image element belongs, use the on-canvas layer selection function via Alt+Middle click on the image element. The available layers will be looped through to show the new active layer and the layer name will be temporarily displayed in the status bar.
There have been problems with slow preview rendering of layer groups in case of many layers in a large image. If you are experiencing this, you can disable rendering layer group previews in
→ → .