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To move a selection with the move tool, simply placed the
pointer inside the selection border and drag to where you
want it. If you have selected more than one area [by holding
down the Shift key while using a selection tool], they will
all move in unison when one is dragged.
If you want to move a copy of a selection to a new location,
leaving the original in place, press the Alt key, and then
drag the selection. To make multiple copies of a selection
while the move tool is selected, hold down the Alt key,
and click an arrow key. A copy will appear displaced slightly
from the original. Click the arrow key for as many copies
as you would like.
Note - if your Alt key does not appear to be working
in Elements, you may have another program running in the
background that has taken over that key. GuruNet (Atomica)
and FlySwat are two such applications. Uninstall them, or
reassign the hot key in those programs to regain use of
the Alt key in Elements.
You may drag selections, or layers from one window to another.
Drag from the active window. A border will highlight the
destination window if you can drop the selection there (some
images don’t accept drag and drop).
You can access the move tool while using most other tools
by holding down the Control key. However, this does not
work when using the hand tool, or the zoom
tool.
The other options for moving selections or layers are the
Copy, Cut, Paste, and Paste Into commands. Make sure your
resolutions are the same in both windows before transferring
images. Note that the Copy command copies only from the
active layer. The Copy Merged copies from all visible layers.
The keyboard shortcut for this tool is the letter V.
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The illustration below is the move tool’s options bar.
If you choose Auto Select Layer, the first layer with pixels
which is under the cursor when the move tool is clicked on the
image will be moved, whether or not it is the currently selected
layer.
If the Show Bounding Box checkbox is selected, your layer’s
contents will be surrounded by a box with handles that looks like
this. Note that this screen shot shows a black square on a white
background. The white was not part of the layer being moved and
transformed.
Any of the square handles you see can be dragged to resize, skew,
rotate or sheer the layer contents. The minute you drag on one
of them, the move tool options bar changes to the transform options
bar, shown second below. Select one of the dots in the
multi dotted square at the left end of this options bar to set
the origin around which the transformation will occur.
From left to right, the items on the transform options bar are
the tool icon, the transform origin selection dots, and three
text boxes. The first two text boxes are for setting width, and
height. Check or uncheck the little chain link between the height
and width boxes to constrain proportions or not. The third text
box is for entering an angle (for counter clockwise angles use
a minus sign) followed by three little faint icons that you’ll
probably miss since they’re practically invisible. Click on one
of those little icons to limit the transformation to, from left
to right, rotation, scale or skew.
You can enter values in any of the text boxes to transform by
numbers, or simply drag on the handles of the bounding box. Press
the Ctrl key as you drag a corner to distort (move only one corner
at once). Before and during transformations, your cursor will
change to indicate which type of motion will happen depending
on which handle you drag. In the black box illustration above,
the rotation cursor is shown. If you don’t like your transformation,
click the cancel button at the end of the options bar. You will
be returned to the move tool position where you started with no
transformation applied.
If you have doodled with a tool’s options and want to get back
to the default settings, click that tool’s icon at the far left
end of its options bar. Choose either Reset Tool to reset only
the current tool, or Reset All Tools to restore default settings
to every tool.
Please note that all descriptions, and illustrations featured
refer to files which are in Photoshop’s .psd format, and which
are in RGB color mode. Other file formats, and color modes may
generate different options. Some Photoshop features are not available
for images not in .psd format, or RGB color mode. To find what
color mode your image is in, choose Image > Mode.