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Open the .gif file in photoshop , all layers will be displayed in the layers panel. Select magic wand and click on the white area , the area gets selected and hit delete to remove the white part. Do that on each layer.
Set Gimp background color from the background color of your image (#eeeeee) Set the tools to the "By Color" selector. Click in a corner of the top layer, this should select the background; Layer>Erase background should make the background transparent. Warm your fingers and do 67 times: Click a layer in the Layer list; Clear near a corner in the ...
I have an gif Image like example. and I want to make its background transparent from white. I am an learner of Photoshop so please describe steps to do it. Currently I was trying to edit each and every layer of this image but its really tough to go through all the layers and I am sure there is an easier way for it
Note: Gimp does support transparency and then when you optimize for animated gif and export it will support transparency in the gif! To edit a gif in Gimp, first open it. Then look at the layers window (CTRL+L). To easily edit an individual frame, uncheck the 'eyeball' for each frame that you wish to hide, then edit the remaining visible frame.
2. As the title suggests, I'm trying to make a GIF in GIMP to use as a logo in After Effects, however, it's not going well. What I expected was just the gif with the transparent background I made using the fuzzy select, shown here: However, I receive this. And when I import to After Effects, the white background completely screws me over.
Assuming you’re starting with a GIF or Photoshop frame animation, with the frames already set up, the easiest way is to create a group with a mask. To do this, select all the layers and press ⌘G (or Layer → New → Group from Layers ).
Semi-transparent colors are not possible. "Transparency" of the original GIF file. To obtain an image with a transparent background but with keeping the shadows we can take the following steps (below done with GIMP but any other image processing application including Photoshop should be able to do this) Convert the image from indexed to RGB.
You cannot use antialias in transparent GIF images since it's only 8-bit, but you can fake it. When exporting using "Save for Web" use the option Matte to match the background color of where the animation will be placed. It adds a few extra colored pixels at the edges of the image.
kontur is correct about the reason for the roughness (i.e. on/off binary state of transparency). Depending on context, one might cheat a little by creating a slightly larger, nearly identical image saved as a PNG with alpha transparency and place it as a static background image with the low-color animated gif centered on it.
The problem is that GIF has no alpha channel that can show semi-transparent colors. For that you would need to save as PNG24. With a GIF, antialiasing inevitably comes with a halo. If you don’t want antialiased edges in a transparent GIF, then you should set the setting Matte to None in the Save for web Panel. (Alt+Shift+Ctrl+S).