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Exporting the SVG as PNG in Inkscape 1.2.1 doesn't result in an image with transparent background. Likewise if I convert to PNG using converters available online. I found various suggestions on this site for how to remove backgrounds in Inkscape for SVGs, e.g. tick the Checkerbox option under Document Properties, or doing a Select All + Ungroup ...
It sees white as the background, and black as the ink. The trace of the bottom image shows a black square with the letters and logo cut out as if the white is the background. You don't need to do any of this. Simply copy the trace you achieved with the top image, and set the fill to white. Then you will be able to place it on a darker background.
Alternatively, you can select the background with the magic wand tool and delete it(I will talk about an effect to erase all the little dots later) If you used the lasso tool, then use the magic wand tool to select the black background and hit Del
For instance, i wanted to remove white background of an image to make it transparent. I used the following method / filter in Inkscape. Select the image object. For versions < 0.91 Go to Filters -> Transparency Utlities -> Light Eraser For version 0.91 Go to Filters > Fill & Transparency > Light Eraser
After removing the background colors I will process it to OCR to extract the table with the text. (I want to extract the table contents including the text). I have Mathpix, a LaTeX OCR, but it is not able to recognize my image, so I want to remove the background color and reduce noise and then process OCR. So I want something like this, for ...
Click on the background area and without releasing the mouse button, paint over all the areas where the background meets the subject, to remove all the remaining white background. Release the mouse button when it looks good. Set Output to: New Layer and Layer Mask
And if that doesn work because it has to many groups and you dont have time to un-group every object the select the white arrow and click the Red Background, go to select - Same - Fill color (All red vectors should be selected at this point) and hit delete.
Another possible way: Zoom the picture and use the free selection tool to select the parts you want to keep, then invert the selection and remove the selected background (if you have transparency on the layer, if not you first have to add an alpha layer to your current layer), I mostly use this method over the fuzzy select because most times I achieve better results.
We start out with a grayscale image, to which I have multiplied a colored background. Create a new layer on top of the image, filled with the image's background color. Set the blend mode/layer mode of the color layer to divide. This removes the color from the image and leaves it with a white background. Flatten the image.
Forgotten totally that glass affects to the background like a bizarre lens; Check the following and go on reading, if interested: This method covers milkiness, smokiness and effect to the background. The starting point is same: A photo of the bottle taken against homogenous greyish background and adjusted for good and realistic contrast & colour.