![]() If you're trying to do something else, it maybe worth posting additional details. If you want the background image to be colour, but whatever is on the pixel layer to be black and white, then clip the HSL layer to the pixel layer. If you want both the background image and the brush stroke to be black and white, then add the pixel layer on it's own layer underneath the group (or underneath an ungrouped HSL adjustment layer). (Alternatively you can add the pixel layer on it's own layer above the group). You haven't said exactly what you're trying to do, however I assume you want the background image to be black and white, but want whatever you paint on the pixel layer to be coloured brush strokes? In that case clip the HSL layer to the background image (short blue horizontal line) and add the pixel layer above it. So in your case, when you add a pixel layer underneath the HSL layer in that group and then paint on it, the HSL layer will only apply to the brush strokes. However, when you add an object or pixel layer to the group, then the adjustment layer becomes clipped to that group. If there's nothing else in the group besides adjustment layers, then it passes though to the layers below. ![]() The HSL adjustment layer doesn't stop working, it's just clipped to that group.
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