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As Paint Shop Pro becomes more powerful so do its tools. This power comes with change, though. Certain tools, such as masks, must, necessarily, change their behavior.
Changes, such as these, can be a little disconcerting to users especially with tools as complex as masks.
In version 5.xx, masks have changed quite radically. Part of this change is due to the fact that PSP 5.xx users now have the capability of using layers (for more info on layers, see the tutorial "PSP 5-Layers Primer").
Masks in PSP 5 are now more like masks in the higher-end programs such as Adobe's Photoshop and Corel's PhotoPaint.
The basics are still similar in that a mask is grayscale and where the mask is white you won't see any change and where it's black you will see change.
The change you will see, though, comes not from applying effects to the image through the mask, but from what's on the underlying layer(s).
submitted: 5 years and 3780 days ago
Think of a layer as a transparent sheet on which you paint. Paint Shop Pro allows up to 100 layers. You can see through each layer to the layers under it until you add color. You can add layers, delete layers, and change the position of layers. Each layer is independent of all other layers until layers are merged. The layer you are currently working on is called the active layer. There are three types of Paint Shop Pro layers: raster, vector, and adjustment.
submitted: 5 years and 3780 days ago