![]() To see how to make use of the Trail Plugin to make a page full of images here is a tutorial which may help you. You could merge them down to each other and then have three on one layer, you could then duplicate that layer and move them them again to meet up with the first three, so you'd then have six. In the example I've posted below, you will see 3 layers with the stars. It takes practice and often you need to keep track of them by giving them names. They are important and many people create their works by using many, many layers before they merge down. It's all about layers, at the end of the day. Sad actually because is otherwise absolutely fantastic! Given that the majority of my work will be drawing and copying shapes onto a layer over a background (and then discarding the background) I guess I need to look for a different tool. Please note that I do not work for Microsoft. You will have to drag the duplicated shape in place after the paste. Rather complicated process for something that is quite simple, but maybe is just sounds easy and really isn't. Copy and paste a shape would only require selecting it and pressing Ctrl+C to copy and then Ctrl+V to paste. Is there any way to not have the background be part of the copy? While I got it to work sort of I seems to always copy the background as well.
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