Several effects rely on a control layer as
input. These compound effects use the pixel values
of the control layer to determine how to affect the pixels of the
layer that the effect is applied to. For example, the Displacement
Map effect uses the color values of a control layer to determine
how far to shift pixels of the underlying layer, and in which direction.
The compound effect ignores effects, masks, and transformations
of a control layer, unless the layer has been precomposed. It is
common to use a control layer that is not itself visible—that is,
its Video switch
is off.
Most compound effects include a Stretch Map To Fit option (or a similarly named option), which temporarily stretches or shrinks a control layer to the effect layer’s dimensions. This provides a pixel in the control layer corresponding to each pixel in the effect layer. If you deselect this option, the compound effect’s calculations are performed as if the control layer is centered on the effect layer at its original size.
For many compound effects, neutral gray pixels
in the control layer correspond to null operations. This makes a
neutral gray solid layer a good starting point for creating a control
layer. Apply the Fractal Noise effect to a layer and precompose
it to create a good control layer for turbulent or atmospheric results.