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You must first place another image from Image > Place or drag from another document, then click on layer with image (layer with image which you want behind) on LAYERS palette and drag it below layer with image to be above.
the law of superstition is the geologi principle that states that in horizontal layers of sedimentary rock.Each layer is older than the layer above it and younger than the layer below it
Layer > New > Background from Layer.
The layer below the earth's outer layer is mesosphere. It is the 3rd layer.
Layer is basicaly image which can have transparent pixels. Every image have at list one layer. One image can consist from at list one layer and at most hundreds or thousands of layers, in Photoshop only limitation for number if layers is your computer memory.
I assume you mean after pasting an image into gimp. Right-click on the layer in the layer box, and click "new layer" that will put the image on it's own layer. Odd wording, I know.
The principle of superposition states that the higher layers are younger because they must be laid down on a layer below, which is therefore older, can be used in cross-sections. Each layer, going up, is younger than all the previous layers.
You can not separate flattened layers (they have becomed one layer), only from history to go to step when you have flattened image.
Which principle is a geologist applying when deciding that a fossil in a mud layer is older than a fossil in a sandstone layer above it.
The principle of superposition states that the higher layers are younger because they must be laid down on a layer below, which is therefore older, can be used in cross-sections. Each layer, going up, is younger than all the previous layers.
Whenever I create a new layer on Photoshop, it's always created above the active layer. Is it possible to change that behavior and make it so that whenever I create a new layer it's created below the active layer instead? My objective with this is so that whenever I import an image it goes below the previous one and not above.
Layers for clipping must be one above another where layer above will be clipped into layer below. Hold down Alt key on keyboard and navigate pointer with mouse button to line between two layers until cursor transform to arrow with two circles, then click and layers are clipped. See related link.