Well, if you must get it done in 16-bit mode, the Rubber Stamp works in 16-bit, so one way to do this might be:
1. Open two images 2. Use Canvas Size to extend one of the image canvases. 3. With the rubber stamp, Alt-click (Option-click on Mac) a very precise spot on one image that meets up with the other image. 4. Click in the second image exactly where the point from the first image would overlap. 5. You should now be able to rubber stamp the second image into the first one. I use this technique to merge differently exposed scans in 16-bit. The toughest part is aligning the rubber stamp. The Caps Lock crosshair and a very small, sharp image target help. --- "M. Denis Hill" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > QUESTION FOR ANYONE: I also have a considerable > library of 6x17 panoramic > negatives and transparencies. With the Minolta, I > must stitch two (or three) > scans to get in an entire image. My experience with > this is that Photoshop > won't let me use the move tool to combine 16-bit > images. Am I doing > something wrong, or is there another way to combine > images? > > Thanks, > > Denis __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Sports - sign up for Fantasy Baseball http://sports.yahoo.com ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe by mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], with 'unsubscribe filmscanners' or 'unsubscribe filmscanners_digest' (as appropriate) in the message title or body
