The Photoshop Grid feature offers a convenient canned set of guidelines already nicely arranged for you at preset intervals. You can use a grid for any application where you want to align objects in a pleasing, geometrically precise arrangement.
Grids share some features in common with guides but boast a few differences, too:
-->Like guides, grids don’t print with your image. They are transparent artifacts used only as reference lines in your image.
-->Objects and tools can optionally snap to the lines on a grid, depending on whether you have View➪Snap To➪Grid turned on or off.
-->You can show or hide grids by choosing View➪Show (Hide)➪Grid.
-->You can change the color of the grid and choose solid lines, dashed lines, or dots for
the grid by choosing Edit➪Preferences➪Guides, Grids, & Slices (Photoshop➪Preferences in Mac OS).
-->You can specify the distance between grid lines and the number of subdivisions between grid lines in the Preferences dialog box. For more information on setting grid and guide preferences.
Grids share some features in common with guides but boast a few differences, too:
-->Like guides, grids don’t print with your image. They are transparent artifacts used only as reference lines in your image.
-->Objects and tools can optionally snap to the lines on a grid, depending on whether you have View➪Snap To➪Grid turned on or off.
-->You can show or hide grids by choosing View➪Show (Hide)➪Grid.
-->You can change the color of the grid and choose solid lines, dashed lines, or dots for
the grid by choosing Edit➪Preferences➪Guides, Grids, & Slices (Photoshop➪Preferences in Mac OS).
-->You can specify the distance between grid lines and the number of subdivisions between grid lines in the Preferences dialog box. For more information on setting grid and guide preferences.
Using grids in Photoshop
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