--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "curtisdeltablues" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> The layers function in Photoshop allows you to vary the opacity to see
> the lines underneath.  It is not preserved when you flatten the
> graphic.  Once flattened and compressed for the Web it looks like one
> graph.  I can't preserve what you need to see for a Web graphic. But
> any program with layers can allow you to match them up.  You have to
> go back and forth with the opacity to see how they line up.  Changing
> opacity changes the colors, they become less distinct so you have to
> go back and forth to compare.  It satisfied me, you will have to judge
> for yourself.  
> 
> 

Typical Adobe crippling of its own software. The capability to print (or 
distribute) transparent 
objects has been around for for well over a decade, but Adobe is only now 
introducing it as 
part of a "major upgrade." Jerks.





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