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Hamaas979

: Photoshop : Difference when drag an image to psd file directly and copy/paste manual I have an image and I want to move this image to my psd file. I have two ways to do this. this is

@Hamaas979

Posted in: #AdobePhotoshop

I have an image and I want to move this image to my psd file. I have two ways to do this.


this is my first solution I often do from very first time I use photoshop. I drag image file directly into my psd file. I often see that this image will be resize base on my psd file if this image is too large and at the corner of layer there is a little symbol.
this solution I studied when I watch video tutorial. That I will open this image by Photoshop. Then [Select][All] then [Edit][Copy] then going to my psd file, [Edit][Paste]. In this case, I see that my image doesn't resize, and doesn't have little symbol at the corner of layer.


So. are there any differences on two above solutions ? Thanks :)

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@BetL875

Approach 1:
This places the artwork into your Photoshop piece as a "Smart Object" (thus the special symbol in the corner). If you double-click that smart object, it will take you to the source artwork and allow you to edit it. When you save these changes, all Photoshop work that refers to that same Smart Object will update with the latest changes. Smart Objects are also used when importing Illustrator artwork. Double-clicking Smart Objects art made by Illustrator will take you to Illustrator to edit the original source artwork.

Pros: Never lose the original "artwork", allows you to add non-destructive filters (Smart Filters), update the original artwork once and all Photoshop files that refer to the same smart object will also update with the changes made.

Cons: You're not really editing the original pixels of that artwork unless you double-click the Smart Object. A bit more memory overhead.

Approach2:
You're copying and pasting pixel information into a Photoshop layer. No smart objects are created, just a layer containing the pixel information you pasted in. This works like any other Photoshop layer. What you see is what you're actually editing.

Pros: Quick, simple, easy - what's there is really there.

Cons: Filters on this layer will be destructive (unless you turn it into a Smart Object) - the underlying pixel information is impacted if you run filters on it. Also you're only editing the information contained in the current open Photoshop file.

Anyway, hope this helps you better understand the differences.

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