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So in Photoshop we all know it's relatively easy to remove a white background from a .jpg image if the contrast is quite visible.
The problem with this image though is it has a grey shadow at the bottom of the image that is reliant on the white background, and therefore once it becomes transparent the shadow looks nasty.
What would be the best approach to remove this once the white background had been removed?
Thanks
https://s15.postimg.org/k2itasu7v/i_Stock_104502239_LARGE.jpg
You can use the Polygonal Lasso Tool. Manual removing.
Zoom to the shadow, select it with the Polygonal Lasso Tool > Right click and : Refine the edge + give it a bit of Feather and paint using the background color of the image.
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I am having an image which is taken as a screenshot and it should be uploaded in my webpage, so I wanted to edit it through Photoshop. As I am new to Photoshop, please help me to find a way. Thanks in advance!
I want the image size (height & width) to be reduced
I want the image to be without losing quality
How to resize this image without losing its quality, through in Photoshop?
You can shrink image without losing quality in 3 ways:
Photoshop:
Launch Photoshop then click on image > image size. Now you can select width and height as per your choice. Don't forget to tick on Bicubic sharper (reduction).
Microsoft Paint:
First of all, launch Paint and then select resize. And now you can adjust width and height of your images.
Online Tools: There are numerous websites available across the web by which you can easily shrink all your images without losing quality.
Reference:
http://www.hugestreet.info/2016/12/shrink-images-without-losing-quality.html
It is not possible to reduce the size of an image without reducing quality unless it is a vector file.
You might be able to convert/export it as a .pdf in photoshop. I know you can in Gimp.
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Bonjour ! this is my first question !
I'm trying some UI animation in Photoshop, and I want to export in GIF file. But, GIF can't support more than 256 colors right ? So my quality is really low...
I think I found a gif with 32697 colors on this website, so is it possible ?...
http://phil.ipal.org/tc.html
If someone can explain me how it's work... I'm pretty lost.
Thanks for your answer.
True-color GIFs are a hack that uses the animated GIF format, puts a 256 color square in each frame, offset from all previous frames, makes each frame not disappear when the next frame appears, and loops only once. Few programs other than web browsers display such images correctly. The files are very large as a result and not suitable for web use.
Try PNG instead.
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There is a problem in my app.I am using worklight v 6.0 and dojo framework.For testing i am using galaxy tab 2 . There is a white space coming between two header when transition occurs. What should i do to resolve this problem.
By reducing the width of the first page you can reduce this error.
Hi
The background color is set to header color. So that when the transition happens the white screen is not seen.
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When editing text in Illustrator, the text being edited receives a solid overlay of the colour of the layer it belongs.
This is sometimes annoying, as I would like to see the text with its own colour and effects.
How can I prevent this behaviour?
This question is probably better suited for http://graphicdesign.stackexchange.com. In the future, I'd recommend searching for answers and posting questions there. However, I understand that doesn't help you as quickly, so to answer your current question...
Under the View menu, you'll want to play with Hide Edges and Hide Bounding Box, depending on exactly what you're trying to accomplish, you may have to turn off both.
Bounding Box
The Bounding Box refers to a single perimeter around the furthest boundary of all currently selected objects. This also contains the transform controls/handles that can be seen at each corner, and in the middle of each side of the perimeter box. This does not affect the highlighting of individual object edges within the selection.
Edges
The Edges refers to the edges of each object within the current selection. If any of the objects are text objects, it also refers to the underlining within the text box.
It's worth noting that if you only have one object selected, you'll notice very little difference unless you choose to hide both Edges and Bounding Box.
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I want to replace the black color in this image with transparency. This would also mean that the gradient in the center of the image would not fade to black but fade to transparency. How is this possible?
The general approach with a solid-color b/g:
Click on the background with Magic Wand: the area becomes surrounded by wavy dashes
Hit the Delete key: background has a hatched pattern
Save and Done
For this to work your image must be RGB. If it isn't already make an RGB copy. If there are different shades of black in the background, you have to do this for each group of pixels that have a different RGB definition. In other words, it's easy with a solid-color background and increasingly time intensive depending on the number of RGB combos in the graphic's background.