Chapter 6. Working with Layers

IN THIS CHAPTER

  • Understanding layers

  • Creating and managing layers

  • Working with objects on layers

Publishers seem to spend a lot of time doing variations of the same things: creating several different versions of the same ad for different markets or flowing text in another language into a design. The goal of software is to automate the predictable so that you have more time for creativity. Toward this goal, InDesign provides a method for preserving the time you put into creating and editing a layout that is used for more than one purpose: layers.

If you've ever seen a series of clear plastic overlays in presentations, understanding layers is easy. In one of those old overhead presentations, the teacher might have started with one overlay containing a graphic and then added another overlay with descriptive text, and then added a third overlay containing a chart. Each overlay contained distinct content, but you could see through each one to the others to get the entire message. InDesign's layers are somewhat like this, letting you isolate content on slices of a document. You can then show and hide layers, lock objects on layers, rearrange layers, and more.

Each document contains a default layer, Layer 1, which contains all your objects until you select and create a new layer. Objects on the default layer — and any other layer, for that matter — follow the standard stacking order of InDesign. (The first object you create is the backmost object, the last one ...

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