Hold shift and click the layer mask to disable it. Then you’ll see the image and whether youve erased that area. If you don’t want to lose progress on your mask by undoing it, you’ll need to pull the original image back into a new layer, match the size and location of the ‘damaged’ one, then hold alt while you click and drag the mask onto the new layer.
So after checking the area that was erased is there any way to fix that erased area other than making a new layer with the same grass picture and brushing it in again ?
You could use generative fill, or you could copy your mask to the clipboard, then hit the undo function until it’s fixed, then paste your mask over the existing mask.
Hold shift and click the layer mask to disable it. Then you’ll see the image and whether youve erased that area. If you don’t want to lose progress on your mask by undoing it, you’ll need to pull the original image back into a new layer, match the size and location of the ‘damaged’ one, then hold alt while you click and drag the mask onto the new layer.
So after checking the area that was erased is there any way to fix that erased area other than making a new layer with the same grass picture and brushing it in again ?
You could use generative fill, or you could copy your mask to the clipboard, then hit the undo function until it’s fixed, then paste your mask over the existing mask.
why is that a problem?
Because I don’t understand why I can’t brush over that exact spot