Let's face it, today's digital cameras make snapping photos of family, friends or anything that happens to catch our eye both easy and enjoyable. No need to worry about wasting film since there isn't any to waste, and that means as long as there's still space left on the camera's memory card, we're free to point the lens and press the shutter button as often as we like. We can get out there and take photos simply for the pure enjoyment of it.
What do you do, though, when these photos you took for fun didn't turn out quite as well as you had hoped? What if, at the end of the day, you end up with a photo you really like but it suffers from a rather unfortunate exposure problem? It may be too dark and dull (underexposed) or too bright with colors and image detail washed out (overexposed). Being the Photoshop savvy person you are, you know that you could use a Levels or Curves image adjustment to do a professional-level tonal correction, but come on, this is just a photo you took for fun! You don't care if it looks professional, you just want it to look better. There must be a way to fix simple exposure problems without going through a lot of hassle, right?
Right you are! In fact, as we'll learn in this tutorial and the next, Photoshop makes it easy to fix minor exposure problems in a matter of seconds thanks to adjustment layers and layer blend modes! In this first tutorial, we'll learn how to quickly brighten underexposed images using the Screen blend mode. Then in the next tutorial, we'll learn a similar way to darken overexposed photos using the Multiply blend mode.
Download our tutorials as printable PDFs! Learning Photoshop has never been easier!
First, let's see how to quickly fix an underexposed image. Here's a photo I shot during a trip to Niagara Falls. It was a dark, cloudy day to begin with, but the underexposed image makes it look even darker than it actually was:
An underexposed photo of Niagara Falls. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The original underexposed image.
Again, if this photo had some greater importance to me, I'd put in the effort to do a proper tonal correction with Levelsor Curves, but I just want this image to look brighter with as little effort as possible and as quickly as possible. Let's get started!

Step 1: Add A Levels Adjustment Layer

With the image newly opened in Photoshop, click on the New Fill or Adjustment Layer icon at the bottom of the Layers panel:
The New Fill or Adjustment Layer icon in the Layers panel in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Click on the New Fill or Adjustment Layer icon.
Choose a Levels adjustment layer from the list that appears. Technically you could choose any of the adjustment layers for this technique, but we'll use Levels because it's one of the most popular and commonly used image adjustments:
Choosing a Levels adjustment layer icon in the Layers panel in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Select Levels from the list.
If you're using Photoshop CS3 or earlier, Photoshop will open the Levels dialog box, displaying the imagehistogram and other options. Don't worry about any of it. Simply click OK to close out of the dialog box because we don't need to make any changes. All we need is the adjustment layer itself. For Photoshop CS4 and CS5 users (I'm using CS5 here), the histogram and other options for the Levels adjustment layer will appear in the Adjustmentspanel. You can leave the Adjustments panel open on your screen but again, just ignore it because there's no need to make any changes.
If we look in the Layers panel, we see that we now have a Levels adjustment layer, which Photoshop named "Levels 1", sitting above our image on the Background layer:
A Levels adjustment layer appears above the Background layer in the Layers panel. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Photoshop adds the Levels adjustment layer above the Background layer.

Step 2: Change The Blend Mode Of The Adjustment Layer To Screen

To brighten the image at this point, all we need to do is change the blend mode of the adjustment layer from Normal to Screen. You'll find the blend mode option in the top left corner of the Layers panel:
Changing the blend mode of the Levels adjustment layer to Screen. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Change the blend mode of the adjustment layer to Screen.
The Screen blend mode is one of several layer blend modes that lighten an image, and simply by adding a Levels adjustment layer and changing its blend mode to Screen, the underexposed photo now appears brighter. We can start to see more detail in the darker areas, especially in the trees which appeared almost black initially:
The underexposed photo now appears brighter with the Screen blend mode. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The Screen blend mode has instantly brightened the underexposed image.

Step 3: Duplicate The Levels Adjustment Layer (Optional)

If you find that your photo still isn't bright enough, simply duplicate the Levels adjustment layer by clicking on it and, with your mouse button held down, dragging it down onto the New Layer icon at the bottom of the Layers panel (it's the icon directly to the left of the Trash Bin):
Dragging the Levels adjustment layer down onto the New Layer icon in the Layers panel. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Click on the adjustment layer and drag it down onto the New Layer icon.
Release your mouse button when the hand cursor is over the New Layer icon. Photoshop makes a copy of the Levels adjustment layer and places it directly above the original. Notice that the newly added copy is already set to the Screen blend mode for us, so there's no need to change it ourselves:
A copy of the Levels adjustment layer appears above the original in the Layers panel. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
A copy of the Levels adjustment layer appears above the original.
With two adjustment layers now added, both set to the Screen blend mode, the image appears even brighter, with much more detail visible in the darker areas:
The image now appears even brighter after adding a second adjustment layer set to Screen. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
A second adjustment layer set to Screen makes the image even brighter.

Step 4: Lower The Opacity Of The Adjustment Layer If Needed

With two Levels adjustment layers added, you may find that the image now appears a little too bright. To dial back some of the brightness and fine-tune the results, lower the opacity of the top adjustment layer. You'll find the Opacityoption directly across from the blend mode option at the top of the Layers panel. By default, opacity is set to 100%. I'm going to lower mine down to around 70% but you'll want to keep an eye on your image as you lower the opacity value to judge the results:
The layer opacity option in the Layers panel in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
Lower the adjustment layer's opacity to fine-tune the brightness.
And with that, we're done! By adding just a couple of Levels adjustment layers, both set to the Screen blend mode, we were able to quickly and easily brighten an underexposed image. Keep in mind, however, that this technique will only bring out detail in the darker areas of the photo if there is actual image detail there to restore. If your image is so badly underexposed that the shadows are nothing but areas of solid black, you can still use this technique to make the image brighter overall but it won't magically bring out detail that wasn't there to begin with.
Here's a "before and after" view of the results, with the original underexposed photo on the left and the brightened version on the right:
Brighten underexposed photos with the Screen blend mode in Photoshop. Image © 2011 Photoshop Essentials.com
The original (left) and brightened (right) versions of the image.
And there we have it! In the next tutorial, we'll learn how we can just as easily darken an overexposed image using the Multiply screen mode!
0


 If you've been using Photoshop for a while, you've probably been taking advantage of layer blend modes, which are easy and powerful ways to change the way two or more layers blend, or interact, with each other. Blend modes can be used for creative effects, but they also have practical uses for image retouching, like using the Screen blend mode to brighten an underexposed image, the Multiply blend mode todarken overexposed images, or the Overlay blend mode to instantly boost contrast in an image that needs more "pop".
You may also have been taking advantage of Photoshop's ability to merge layers together. Merging layers has several important advantages, like keeping the Layers panel clean and organized, and reducing the file size of the document. Merging layers can also be a necessary step before applying further edits to an image.
Yet for all the power of blend modes and the benefits of merging layers in Photoshop, something strange often happens when we try to merge multiple layers together when those layers are set to different blend modes. What happens is that we usually end up with a different looking image than what we had before merging the layers. Sometimes it's a subtle difference; sometimes it's a big difference. If you haven't yet come across this problem, chances are you will at some point. So in this tutorial, we'll look at an example of the problem, explain why it happens, and learn an easy trick to get around it!
This tutorial assumes you're already familiar with layer blend modes in Photoshop. If not, be sure to check out ourFive Essential Blend Modes For Photo Editing tutorial where I cover everything you need to know.

The Problem With Merging Blend Modes

To see an example of the problem, I'll create a quick composite image using three separate photos and a few blend modes. Since compositing images in Photoshop is a huge topic that's beyond the scope of this tutorial, I'll run through this fairly quickly. If we look in my Layers panel, we see that I've already added all three photos to my document, and that each image is sitting on its own separate layer:
The Layers panel showing each photo on an independent layer. Image © 2015 Steve Patterson, Photoshop Essentials.com
The Layers panel showing each photo on an independent layer.
Let's look at the photos one at a time, starting with the one on the bottom. I'll turn off the top two layers by clicking on their visibility icons:
Turning off the top two layers in the Layers panel. Image © 2015 Steve Patterson, Photoshop Essentials.com
Temporarily hiding the top two layers in the document.
Hiding the top two layers lets us see just the image on the bottom layer. This is the photo I'll use as the starting point for the composite (surfer on beach photo from Shutterstock):
The image on the Background layer. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
The image on the bottom layer.
Since this is the bottom layer, I'll leave its blend mode set to Normal (the default mode):
Leaving the bottom layer set to the Normal blend mode. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Leaving the bottom layer set to the Normal blend mode.
Next, I'll turn on the second image (the one on the middle layer) by clicking its visibility icon:
Clicking the visibility icon for Layer 2. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Clicking the visibility icon for Layer 2.
Here's my second photo. To save time, I've already cropped and repositioned it to fit better within the composition (woman on beach photo from Shutterstock):
The image on the middle layer. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
The image on the middle layer.
This image is also currently set to the Normal blend mode, which is why it's completely blocking the photo below it from view. To blend the two images together, first I'll click on Layer 2 in the Layers panel to select it. Then, I'll change its blend mode from Normal to Multiply. I'll also lower it's Opacity value down to 60%:
Changing the blend mode and opacity for Layer 2. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Changing the blend mode to Multiply (and Opacity to 60%).
Here's the result of blending the two layers together. So far, so good:

The effect of blending Layer 1 and Layer 2.
Let's bring in the third image (on the top layer). I'll turn it back on in the document by clicking its visibility icon:
Clicking the visibility icon for Layer 3. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Clicking the visibility icon for Layer 3.
Here's my top image. Again, to save time, I've already cropped and repositioned it (surfing the wave photo from Shutterstock):
The image on the top layer. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
The image on the top layer.
To blend this top image with the photos below it, I'll click on Layer 3 to select it, then I'll change its blend mode from Normal to Overlay:
Changing the blend mode for Layer 3 to Overlay. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Changing the top layer's blend mode to Overlay.
Here's the result with all three layers now blending together. Not bad considering all I had to do to achieve this effect was change a couple of layer blend modes (and lower the opacity of the middle layer):
Three images blended together in Photoshop. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
The result of blending all three images together.
Let's say I'm happy with the results so far, and now I want to make further edits to the overall image. Before I can do that, I'll need to merge the layers together. Now, you may think that all I need to do is merge the top two layers, since they're the ones set to the different blend modes (by "different", I mean they're set to something other than the default Normal mode). Let's see what happens, though, if I try to merge just those top two layers.
There's a few different ways I could merge them. One way would be to use Photoshop's Merge Down command which takes the currently-selected layer and merges it with the layer directly below it. That sounds like exactly what we need, so with my top layer (Layer 3) selected in the Layers panel, I'll go up to the Layer menu in the Menu Bar along the top of the screen and choose Merge Down:
Choosing the Merge Down command from under the Layer menu. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Going to Layer > Merge Down.
Here's the result after merging the top layer (set to the Overlay blend mode) with the layer below it (set to the Multiply blend mode). As we can see, something's not right. The image has suddenly lost most of its contrast. It also looks much darker than it did before:
The result after applying the Merge Down command. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
The result after applying the Merge Down command.
Let's look in the Layers panel to see if we can figure out what's happened. Here, we see that the top two layers have in fact been merged together onto Layer 2, but what happened to my Overlay blend mode? It's gone! All I'm left with is the Multiply blend mode. That explains why the image now looks so much darker:
The Merge Down command left me with just the Multiply blend mode. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
The Overlay blend mode is gone. Only the Multiply mode remains.
Well, that didn't work, so I'll press Ctrl+Z (Win) / Command+Z (Mac) on my keyboard to quickly undo the Merge Down command. Another way I can try to merge the top two layers together is with Photoshop's Merge Layerscommand. With my top layer already selected, I'll press and hold my Shift key and click on the middle layer. This selects both the Overlay and Multiply layers at the same time:
Shift-clicking on the top two layers to select them. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Selecting both blend mode layers.
With both layers selected, I'll go back up to the Layer menu at the top of the screen and this time, I'll choose Merge Layers:
Selecting the Merge Layers command from under the Layer menu. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Going to Layer > Merge Layers.
Did that work? Nope. The Merge Layers command gave me a different result from what I saw with the Merge Down command, but it's still not right. The top two images merged together, but what happened to my third image (the one on the bottom layer)? It completely disappeared:
The result after applying the Merge Layers command. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
The result after applying the Merge Layers command.
Looking in the Layers panel, we see that Photoshop once again merged the top two layers as expected, but this time, it discarded both my Overlay and Multiply blend modes, setting the merged layer to Normal. That's why the merged layer is now completely blocking the image on the bottom layer from view:
The Merge Layers command discarded both of my blend modes. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
The Merge Layers command discarded both of my blend modes.

Why We Can't Merge Blend Modes

So, what's going on? Why can't I simply merge the Overlay and Multiply layers together without changing the composite's overall appearance? That's a good question. In fact, it's so good, there's actually three good reasons for why it's not working.
The first is because of what blend modes in Photoshop do, or more accurately, what they don't do; blend modes don't change the actual pixels on the layer. They simply change the way the pixels on the layer interact with the pixels on the layer, or layers, below it. What we see after changing a layer's blend mode is nothing more than a live preview of that interaction. The pixels themselves have not changed.
To quickly see what I mean, I'll press Ctrl+Z (Win) / Command+Z (Mac) on my keyboard to undo the Merge Layers command. Then, I'll change my top layer (Layer 3) from Overlay back to the Normal blend mode:
Setting the top layer's blend mode back to Normal. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Setting the top layer's blend mode back to Normal.
"Normal", in the world of layer blend modes, simply means that the layer will not interact with the layer(s) below it at all. This allows us to view the actual contents of the layer, and here, with the top layer set back to Normal, we see that the image on the layer has not changed in any way. All I did by changing its blend mode to Overlay was change the way these pixels were interacting with the pixels on the layers below it. If I tried a different blend mode, something other than Overlay, I'd see a different result, but again, all I'd be seeing is a live preview. The original image on the layer never changes:
No pixels were harmed by changing the layer's blend mode. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Blend modes are non-destructive. No pixels are ever harmed by changing a layer's blend mode.
The second reason is because a layer in Photoshop can have only one blend mode applied to it at any given time. Each blend mode causes the pixels on the layer to interact in a different way, but only one way can be active. The Overlay blend mode, for example, boosts contrast in the image, while the Multiply blend mode darkens the image. It's a choice between one or the other. It's not possible to have a single layer doing both of these things at once.
The third reason why I can't just merge the two blend mode layers together without changing the overall appearance is that the overall appearance is not simply a result of those two layers. It's a result of all three layers working together, including the bottom layer that's set to the Normal blend mode. The top two layers may be the ones that actually had their blend modes changed, but remember, they're blending not with themselves, or just with each other; they're blending with the bottom layer as well (the one we tend to forget about). That means that if I want to keep the exact same result after merging the layers, I need to merge all the layers that are creating the result, and that includes the Normal layer on the bottom.

The Hidden Keyboard Trick

So the bad news is, there is simply no way to do what I initially tried to do; I can't just merge the Overlay and Multiply layers together, at least not without changing the overall appearance of the image. Yet now we know why! The problem was that I was forgetting about the layer on the bottom (the one set to the Normal blend mode). It's not just my top two layers creating the composition; it's a combination of all three layers. This means that if I want to merge the result, I need to merge all three layers (the one set to Overlay, the one set to Multiply, and the one set to Normal).
One thing I don't want to do is just flatten the image. I want to keep my layers intact and simply merge the result I've achieved so far onto a new layer. Thankfully, Photoshop includes a hidden keyboard trick for doing exactly that! First, select the top layer in the Layers panel:
Selecting the top layer in the Layers panel. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Selecting the top layer.
With the top layer selected, here's the trick. Press and hold your ShiftAlt and Ctrl (Win) / ShiftOption andCommand (Mac) keys on your keyboard and press the letter E. Photoshop essentially takes a snapshot of the way the image currently looks (with all the blend modes intact), then places the snapshot on a brand new layer above the others! It won't look like anything has happened in the document (already a good sign), but if we look in my Layers panel, we see that I now have a fourth layer (Layer 4) sitting above the original three layers:
Photoshop takes a snapshot of the composite image and places it on a new layer. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Photoshop takes a snapshot of the composite image and places it on a new layer.
To get a better sense of what just happened, I'll press and hold my Alt (Win) / Option (Mac) key and click on Layer 4's visibility icon. This keeps Layer 4 visible but turns off all the other layers in the document:
Turning off all but the top layer by Alt/Option-clicking on its visibility icon. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Turning off all but the top layer by Alt/Option-clicking its visibility icon.
Even though Layer 4 is now the only visible layer in my document, the overall appearance of the image hasn't changed. That's because I've successfully merged the entire effect onto this single layer:
All three layers have been successfully merged onto the new layer. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
All three layers have been successfully merged onto the new layer.
To turn the other layers back on again (even though I don't really need to), I'll once again press and hold my Alt (Win) / Option (Mac) key and click on Layer 4's visibility icon:
Turning the other layers back on by again Alt/Option-clicking Layer 4's visibility icon. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Turning the other layers back on by again Alt/Option-clicking Layer 4's visibility icon.
At this point, it's a good idea to rename the top layer. To do that, I'll double-click on the name "Layer 4" to highlight it, then I'll type in "Merged" as the new layer name. To accept the name change, I'll press Enter (Win) / Return (Mac) on the keyboard:
Renaming the new layer 'merged'. Image © 2015 Photoshop Essentials.com
Renaming the new layer "Merged".
And there we have it! That's how to merge multiple layers set to different blend modes in Photoshop!
0