British Gas Boiler Cover...please...
Home & Garden0 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by peanut. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You have saved your files in Photoshop's native format. That is the only one that preserves all the layers and so on. I use PainShop Pro (a similar program) so cannot say for sure what your save options will be. Beneath where you enter the filename, you should have a drop-down list of choices of file types. If TIFF, JPEG etc are not offered as choices, then you may have to flatten all your image layers down to a single layer first. Try doing that and then choose Save-As again and the choices should then be offered.
Incidentsally, TIFF is a lossless format (no loss of quality or detail) and JPEG is a lossy format (some data is lost each time you save a JPEG).
I'm puzzled, as pointed out already you have this extremely sophisticated and expensive software, which has excellent help and tutorial files,yet you come here for help with basic functions.
Has it occured to you to look at the help files ? if it hasnt then i dont see how buying a book will help either.
Bazwillrun,
you dont need to post offensive responses like that, I did look in the help files and found nothing explaining what i was looking for. My mistake though, I was under the impression that this was a website to get help for answers you cant find or dont know the answer to. Thats ok though, not everyone has to post smartass answers. I posted a more specific thread with the same basic question and Buenchico was more than happy to explain how its done.