The auto hide switch only removes the strip at that instant. Unfortunately, as soon as that area is “revisited”, the strip reappears getting in the way of workflow.
After looking at this I see why I don’t have the problem you describe. I have the metadata display turned on. The metadata is at the bottom under the image so the image doesn’t go down into the area where the pointer wakes up the film strip.
Paul
The strip should hide itself so if you start your crop from the top it shouldn’t appear.
The brick order can’t be edited AFAIK, it is the order that Aperture applies the adjustments in. You can hide unused bricks.
David
d.
Thank you for your reply David.
The strip does not hide when cropping without constraint. If its on the left, I need to move it to the bottom to crop from the top.
It would be nice to be able to place bricks in any order to fit ones workflow.
Hi Paul
There is a little slide switch to switch between permanently displaying the strip and auto-hide. I think if you switch that the problem will go away.
I agree it would be nice to rearrange the bricks, but not at the expense of losing the order applied.
d.
d.
The auto hide switch only removes the strip at that instant. Unfortunately, as soon as that area is “revisited”, the strip reappears getting in the way of workflow.
Paul
After looking at this I see why I don’t have the problem you describe. I have the metadata display turned on. The metadata is at the bottom under the image so the image doesn’t go down into the area where the pointer wakes up the film strip.
Thomas
Use the Crop Tool geometry dash scratch to cut out unwanted parts of the image. In Photoshop, press C to select the crop tool.
[url=https://geometry-dashscratch.com]Geometry Dash Scratch[/url]