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wjfbailey
Participant
March 17, 2018
Answered

Selecting colour range then deleting the selection in another layer makes the whole layer go semi transparent

  • March 17, 2018
  • 2 replies
  • 1691 views

I use Photoshop to create linear illustrations for screen prints.  Each layer represents a separate colour and is eventually printed separately onto polyester as a 'print positive' - effectively acting as stencil.

Sometimes I need to change a positive solid black line into a negative 'cut out' in a solid area of colour.

I have always done this by doing 'Select Colour Range' on the line, changing layer, then deleting the selection in a solid area of colour/black.

However something has changed in Photoshop and it's doing something weird.  When I delete the selection in the solid area of colour, at the same time it makes the entire layer semi-transparent. 

I have no idea why and it's driving me mad.  Can anyone help please?

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer D Fosse

That means you have more selected than you think. The "marching ants" is just the 50% boundary.

Check the preview in the Select Color Range dialog, and reduce "fuzziness".

2 replies

Norman Sanders
Legend
March 17, 2018

If, as you say, each color is on a separate layer (Fig 1), consider not making a tricky selection:

Lock the line layer and Edit > Fill with white (Fig 2)

Then Layer > Merge Down (Fig 3)

wjfbailey
wjfbaileyAuthor
Participant
March 17, 2018

Thanks Norman.sanders.  It wouldn't work for my purposes though as I need the background transparent rather than white.  D Fosse's answer worked though - the problem was the lightness of the colour combined with the fuzziness setting being too high.

Norman Sanders
Legend
March 17, 2018

Of course! Sorry. Senior moment.

D Fosse
Community Expert
D FosseCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
March 17, 2018

That means you have more selected than you think. The "marching ants" is just the 50% boundary.

Check the preview in the Select Color Range dialog, and reduce "fuzziness".

wjfbailey
wjfbaileyAuthor
Participant
March 17, 2018

Many thanks D Fosse.  That did work.  Because the line colour was quite pale I had to turn the fuzziness right down to get it to stop making the whole layer semi-transparent, but I found that if I converted the line into black first I could keep the fuzziness set quite high without it causing the same problem.  Not sure why though!