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Affinity photo blend tool9/28/2023 ![]() ![]() They can also be applied to masks and adjustment layers, and used when painting with pixel brushes or applying adjustment layers.īy hovering your pointer over the pop-up menu at the top of the Layers panel you can scroll through each of the blend modes to see their effect, which makes it easy to select the right one for your task. You can set the fade to any angle, and you can drag the midpoint marker to skew the fade towards the beginning or the end.Īll these blend modes have been shown here on text layers for ease of reference, but of course they can be applied to any object or any group of objects. So you can see the Erase mode really does knock out the underlying layers in its group.Īlso unique to Designer 2, the Fade tool does just what its name implies: it fades out any object, or any group, just by dragging the tool across it. The blue circle, beneath the group, isn’t affected. Still, it appears just like white text.īut when the top two layers (the layer set to Erase mode, and the red rectangle) are grouped, then the Erase layer only affects the other layers within the group. When a new object is added beneath, the top Erase layer erases that layer as well. With just two layers, it just looks like white text. Unique to Affinity Designer 2 (you won’t find this in Adobe Illustrator), Erase mode cuts out its content from the layers beneath. Screen mode will make everything beneath brighter but Lighten mode is only visible where the target (top) layer is lighter than the underlying layer. These modes are the opposite of Multiply and Darken, above. That’s why it disappears on the right, as the darkness value of the green gradient matches that of the blue text. In contrast, Darken mode only shows up where the target layer is already darker than the underlying layer. Multiply adds the darkness of the current layer to the darkness of the one beneath, producing a result that’s darker than both. ![]() So it has the effect of darkening the bright green, but brightening the dark red.īoth these blend modes make the layer content darker. Even though the word is set here in the same blue as previously. The Luminosity mode changes the brightness of artwork without changing its color. So the word is still blue, but because the green end of the gradient is brighter than the red end, the word darkens towards the right. The Color mode changes the color of the artwork, without changing its brightness. The first example below shows the word NORMAL set in pale blue on a green-red gradient background. ![]() There are 32 different modes altogether, far too many to detail here but we’ll look at some of the more significant ones to see how they differ. Affinity Designer 2, just like Affinity Photo (and Adobe Photoshop), features a range of different blend modes that alter the look of any layer depending on the layers beneath. ![]()
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