No matter if you want to make a background transparent (PNG), add a white background to a photo, extract or isolate the subject, or get the cutout of a photo - you can do all this and more with remove.bg.

Transform your photos with our background remover app! Highlight your subject and create a transparent background, so you can place it in a variety of new designs and destinations. Try it now and immerse your subject in a completely different environment!


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Change your background color or replace it with an image of your own. Customizing your pictures with emojis or simply add text to your image - it has never been easier! Check out our library of backgrounds and templates, if you want to get inspired.

Yes, you can either remove the background on your phone with the PhotoRoom in your browser or with the PhotoRoom app. The app is available for both iOS and Android devices, allowing you to easily edit and customize your images on-the-go.

Removing the background from product pictures enhances the focus on the product, maintains consistency and branding, provides versatility for marketing materials, allows for contextual flexibility, facilitates product comparison, and improves the overall aesthetics of your product listings.

Install our desktop application to drag and drop 1000s of images at once. Click "Start" and watch as each image gets cut out automatically. Boost your efficiency and replace background from multiple images to get thousands of AI powered cut outs for all your design needs.

More than just removing image background, we built Removal.AI to help our customers realize their ideas, enabling them to fully use their creative power and unlock their business potential. If you need help, we are happy to work with you!

Defines the strength of the erasure. An opacity of 100% erasespixels to complete transparency on a layer and to the backgroundcolor on a locked layer. A lower opacity erases pixels to partialtransparency on a layer and paints partially with the backgroundcolor on a locked layer.

TheBackground Eraser tool turns color pixels to transparent pixelsso that you can easily remove an object from its background. Withcareful use, you can maintain the edges of the foreground objectwhile eliminating background fringe pixels.

So I shot against a green screen for some senior portraits (never do it again) and I am in the process of clipping my subjects. I am using the background eraser tool which is clipping nicely but it is leaving a smudge (for lack of a better term) around the entire area I erased. When I paste the clip into my digital background, I can see evidence of the tool. It worked yesterday just fine on test cuts from my son's shots. It has to be a simple setting. I have tried the reset tool and tinkered with tolerance etc.

Can you also show the background you want to the images into. Sometimes the selection technique (particularly when it comes to refining the edge and removing edge colour) will depend on the new background

The background eraser is still an eraser, and something you should NEVER use in Photoshop. Select and Mask is a way better option and click Decontaminate colors to get all the green out... that stuff bleeds everywhere.

Thank you everyone for the replies. While I have experience in photoshop, I don't even pretend to have scratched the surface of knowing all of its intricacies. With that, as a photographer and frequent user of lightroom, I certainly know better than to destroy an image but all the content I found online about digital backgrounds, the background eraser tool specifically, was used more often than not. With that, I have attached 3 images. The original shot, the background and the edited photo against a blue backdrop which clearly shows the brush strokes. I fussed with the tolerance, I was using a hardness of 100 on the brush settings and even tried a mask but I am afraid my lack of experience in photoshop has left the ugly green bleed in the edited photo. Again, I will never use the green screen again. This is a friend but I do not want to have to call her back to re-shoot. I have successful outdoor photos but shame on me, was trying something new for the yearbook shot and a digital background and did not use a plan b just in case. These are cut down resolutions.

This is done within a minute with Quick Selection tool (select the green background and then inverse selection and hit create mask -button). Then use refine edge from Select-menu, hold down shift-key and select Select and mask. There you can tweak settings and use refine edge brush. That's all.

Green screen shooting is fine, but it it need to be lit the right way, the foreground subject need to be as far away from the background as possible, and lit the right way too. A Google search should give you the right technic for this.

The trouble with some of the instruction videos is that they use a high contrast image - dark hair - light background. Your image against the green was pretty good to be fair but still took a couple of minutes to go round with a small refine edge brush and with zoom at 100%.

Chuck, game changer. The split slide pretty much removed all of the green. Very little brush work left to do. Again, probably due to my lack of experience but the only issue I had was the inabilty to save this as a JPEG. I could only save this as a lab quality print such as JPEG 2000 or TIFF which are really high resolution. I have a snippet of it plus the image I converted back to RGB. I also made some curve adjustment and luminosity tweaks based on Dave's comment. I really liked the brown background against her hair.

The background eraser tool was designed to sample an area and to not erase parts of the photo that didn't match, kind of a tolerance thing, so since your green screen was a bit uneven in density etc, it only erased parts. It's an old tool, and there are much better ways to remove a big. I took a class years ago, where the instructor had us use it. I thought it was a bit useless back then, and still do.

Trained on millions and millions of real world images, not artificial lab data, the Clipping Magic Auto-Clip AI background remover handles so much more than just a few cherry-picked foreground categories.

eCommerce marketplaces often require that items for sale be on a white background and cropped so that the item is front and center. We recommend making fit-to-result on a white background the default for your images. Info

Have been trained on millions of real-world images and graphics, including people, products, digital stamps, icons, text, animals, and cars, the Apowersoft AI handles each picture with either solid or complicated colors and designs so well without any pick of foreground or background categories. And the AI learning ability is continuously being improved.

Fully automatical crop-out is ready to work anytime. Yet if you do not like the result, the perfect background remover also gives you smart Keep/Remove tool for precision control on even the most challenging photos. Then adjust the image - crop the image, zoom in/out, move, and duplicate to get your preferred result.

Remove background, design product photographys, create posters, packaging, banners - all your design projects start easily with Apowersoft Background Eraser. Combine your basic cutouts with built-in unlimited designs, colors and custom images to create entirely new images.

The batch mode helps you for the background removal process for multiple images, automatically. Easily change background of all photos in one go. With just one click, you will be able to achieve both beauty and efficiency. Ramp up the creativity and efficiency right now!

Hi! I'm a web designer just coming from Photoshop. I bought affinity because sometimes I need to work with AI files. For the past half hour I have been trying to remove a pesky white background from a pixel layer. Is there no magic eraser/background eraser equivilant? Do I really need to erase round each pixel by hand? If so, Affinity isn't going to work for me.

 

Thanks!

Hi Paul, it is not the illistrator file I am having problems with. Just wondering a quick way to remove backgrounds from pixel-based images? In Photoshop I would be able to select the magic eraser tool, click on the white background and it would disappear. Working with icons and graphics a lot this is something I have to frequently do with pixel based images.

I'm digging this topic up to ask if this is the only way to get a similar effect to the Photoshop magic eraser? I regularly need to remove the white background from a proof sheet of thumbnail images that also contain white. I want to remove the background around the images while leaving the white colour inside the images intact, so that I can place it on a coloured background without the background colour bleeding into the thumbnail images. In Photoshop this is a 1 click operation - I'm still looking for an easy way to do this in Affinity Designer or Photo that doesn't require me to create masks behind each image.

.ai files open in affinity and objects are separate from the background anyway, because .ai files are vectors not pixels. If its pixel based then Affinity Photo is a better option than Affinity Designer.

I'm digging this topic up to ask if this is the only way to get a similar effect to the Photoshop magic eraser? I regularly need to remove the white background from a proof sheet of thumbnail images that also contain white. I want to remove the background around the images while leaving the white colour inside the images intact, so that I can place it on a coloured background without the background colour bleeding into the thumbnail images.

Alternately, if you are exporting to a raster image format like PNG or JPG, in the Export > More window, just set the Matte color as desired. For this you do not need to set the document to have a transparent background. ff782bc1db

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