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Automatic placement which I do not want - how do I stop it?

New Here ,
Oct 07, 2025 Oct 07, 2025

I cannot open more than one image in Photoshop. If I open a second image it automatically is placed on top of the first image. How do I stop this happening?

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Community Expert , Oct 07, 2025 Oct 07, 2025

It’s OK to use drag-and-drop, but you have to drop the new file in specific places.

 

If you drop inside the Photoshop workspace, the file opens as a separate document tab if you drop it into the empty part of the tab strip highlighted in the picture below. If you drop a file inside the window of an open document, Photoshop assumes you want to add it to that document. So you can control how the new file comes in by choosing where you drop it:

  • To add the new image to an open document, drop it in
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Community Expert ,
Oct 07, 2025 Oct 07, 2025

How are you “opening” them? Are you using a button, a menu command, a keyboard shortcut, drag-and-drop, sending to Photoshop from Bridge or Lightroom…?

 

The reason I ask is because some methods can open files in separate document windows (which is what it sounds like you want), while other methods add files to an existing open document. It might just be a matter of adjusting the technique.

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New Here ,
Oct 07, 2025 Oct 07, 2025

Thanks Conrad_c for getting back. 

I'm dragging and dropping. I'll try opening the images using the 'open' command....

Have just tried it and it works, thanks so much for the suggestion.

All the best, 

Joanne

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Community Expert ,
Oct 07, 2025 Oct 07, 2025
LATEST

It’s OK to use drag-and-drop, but you have to drop the new file in specific places.

 

If you drop inside the Photoshop workspace, the file opens as a separate document tab if you drop it into the empty part of the tab strip highlighted in the picture below. If you drop a file inside the window of an open document, Photoshop assumes you want to add it to that document. So you can control how the new file comes in by choosing where you drop it:

  • To add the new image to an open document, drop it inside that document window. 
  • To add the new image as a separate document, drop it outside all document windows.  

 

Photoshop-file-drag-and-drop-zone.jpg

 

Another way that opens a dropped file as a separate document (at least on macOS) is to drop the file on the Photoshop application icon, such as in the Dock or on any shortcut/alias of the Photoshop application icon.

 

 

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