![]() So Photoshop considers that JPEG can actually house a master document IF (and only if) all the features of your document can be saved in the JPEG format. Conceptually a master document is saved into a file and loaded from a file so that it maintains all the features you added while editing. Photoshop has a concept that you will be working with master documentsand occasionally saving copies as work products. ![]() Understanding it could help you make better decisions while using Photoshop. Some of the posters up in this thread implied that this is a problem and/or is somehow not logical (yes, I know some of the posts are old). I then recorded actions and with shortcuts keys for fast access. I do a lot of screen capturing so I wrote scripts to work with the clipboard create new document or past in the clipboard expand the canvas for the clipboard size and position the new layer into the new canvas. ![]() I also wrote the script to replace an existing file if that file existed. Which meant I could record all I wanted in an action and the action would pass the recorded setting to the script. So I stripped all the layer exporting and just create a "SaveAS" plug-in script. Not only did it have the code for Save AS it was a Plug-in script with action support and it can save many file type with options for the file type. Looking at the scripts that ship with Photoshop I found one "Export Layers to File". The Problem is "Save as" defaults to PSD when your editing a layered document. You do not need to flatten or or change color bit depth to 8 bit mode to save a jpeg file save as will do that for you and revert your document back to its layered state and color bit depth. ![]()
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