Skip to main content

Guides, Grid and Snapping

 

Guides, Grid and Snapping

Precise position of image elements can be very important. The basic tool, which can help us align image elements, are rulers. Rulers can be enabled in View - Rulers. But there are several other ways how to align elements precisely.

Guides

There can be multiple guides in a PSD document. A guide is a horizontal or a vertical line, which is displayed over the document and can help you align elements.

To add or delete a guide, select the Move tool and enable rulers. To add a guide, click on the ruler and drag the mouse into the document. To delete a guide, click on it and drag it onto the ruler.

To move existing guides, click on them with a Move tool and drag them to a new location.

Grid

Designers often need to place some elements regularly, with an equal distance between them. Instead of adding many guides with the same spaces between them, we can use the grid. A regular grid will be displayed over your document, which can help you align other elements.

Pixel Grid

The Pixel Grid draws a grid with one pixel gap. It is visible only after zooming in close enough. When an image area has a constant color, the Pixel Grid helps you see the borders between pixels (can be useful for pixel art).

Guides, Grid or Pixel Grid can be enabled or disabled using View - Show - Guides, Grid or Pixel Grid. There is the main switch: View - Extras, which can disable them all at once. The size of the grid can be changed in Edit - Preferences. Note, that guides are related to a specific document and can be different in each document, while the same grid is displayed over all documents.

Snapping

Placing elements precisely on the guide (or on the grid) can be hard. We may need to zoom in and move the object several times, until it is on the right spot.

Snapping can solve this problem. Whenever your object is near the guide (e.g. closer than 5 pixels), it is "snapped" to that guide, i.e. its location is set to the location of that guide. You don't have to be so precise, Photopea finds the nearest guide and moves the object for you.

Snapping can be enabled or disabled using View - Snap. You can snap to different things, such as guides, grid, document bounds etc. (take a look into View - Snap To). But with snapping, you are less flexible, e.g. when you want to place an object close to the guide, but not exactly on it. It is useful to disable snapping in such cases.

Snapping can be used with all tools, where you would expect it: Move tool, Free Transform, Crop tool, selections, tools for editing vector graphics etc.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Introduction To Photopea

  Introduction Photopea is an advanced image editor, which can work with both raster and vector graphics. You can use it for simple tasks, such as resizing images, as well as complex tasks, such as designing webpages, creating illustrations, processing photographs and more. This website will teach you how to use Photopea  step by step . We will start with basic tasks and gradually progress to more complex features. The chapters (on the left) have been organized, such that each chapter uses only the knowledge from previous chapters, so you can learn effectively and efficiently. Colors Right now, Photopea works with the sRGB color space (the basic color space for the web), with the 8-bit color depth. All exported files use sRGB, too. Starting and using Photopea Photopea editor works in a web browser. It can be started by going to  www.Photopea.com . Photopea can run on any device (desktop, laptop, tablet, phone or any other computer), but for the best comfort, we recommend having a big s

Text

  Text P utting text into images is an essential operation of image editing. Photopea offers a rich set of tools for working with text. Text is stored in PSD documents inside   Type Layers , which have a thumbnail with a capital letter T on it. There are three kinds of Type layers: Point text  - defined by the point of origin. The text starts at that point and continues on a single line until the line break (Enter). Paragraph text  - defined by the rectangle. Paragraphs are broken automatically into multiple lines to fill the rectangle. Text on a curve  - defined by a curve, letters are arranged along the curve. Creating a Type layer The  Type tool  is used for working with Type layers:  . To create a  Point text , choose a Type tool and click (press and release) the mouse at some place, which will become the origin. To create a  Paragraph text , press the mouse and drag it to draw a rectangle, then release the mouse. After creating the new Type layer, you can start typing. If you clic