Stock vector graphics tend to appeal to the lowest common denominator, and programs other than Illustrator don't necessarily support transparency, so you will often find that they use the Screen blending mode to simulate transparency. If a .ai file is supplied, you will definitely want to use that instead of a .eps, which doesn't support transparency. Otherwise, you will have to do some work to the file to convert these black circles to transparent gradients, or find a way to use the file as they designed it, with a black background.

Hi thank you so much for the quick response. The file it downloads is an EPS and not a .AI. That's why I thought when it said "transparent background" I thought it would have just that as I've worked with eps' before with transparent backgrounds. I've included an image of some of the layers in this image. I try to delete the last few layers and I'm left with lots of circles. hope you can help still!


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I'm having the exact same problem. I tried to save a vector I downloaded from shutter stock as an image but it still has the checked pattern. I don't know about you, but having to remove that background by highlighting the checks and all that stuff is an absurd waste of time, especially when there are programs like canva out there for non designers. Lame.

I have this same issue. unfortunately i've got quite a few of the shutterstock images that appear to be transparent, in hopes that i would one day figure it out. Very disappointing (not for illustrator but for shutterstock)

If this is a vector image, then they've crreated the effects using various Transparency options. It needs a color behind it to work properly. If you put a white-filled object behind, then the effect should be as you intend.

When covering one vector shape with another; if the edges overlap, the background shape's color is used as a (distasteful looking) pseudo-anti-alias effect on the foreground shape's edge, instead of having the foreground shape's color blend in with the color of whatever is outside both shapes. (Wow, I'm not sure if I made any sense describing this.)

I can cope with this happening within Illustrator, but why does it have to happen in any exported vector formats as well? For instance, when rendering logos in .EPS format, how do you deal with this annoying phenomenon? Is there any way to circumvent it without having to manually offset (trap?) the background object's edge so as not to get this undesired effect?

Choosing "Save for Web" in Illustratos seems to always render perfect results. But somehow (maybe someone can explain the technical reason) vector formats won't regard the behind-object to be entirely covered by the frontmost object (i.e. disregard the lower object's edge), but instead insist on "spilling" in its color onto the edge of the frontmost object.

This isn't really an Illustrator issue, but a general problem when vector art is rasterized. Displaying vector art on a pixel-based screen involves rasterizing just as exporting vector art to a pixel-based image format does.

I put an image (photo) into illustrator and then image trace this then turned it into a black and white vector with a transparent background as you can see this is what i wanted, however certain parts inside the image didnt go white like the rest they went transparent like the background outside the image.

You can license Adobe Stock vectors as scalable AI, EPS, or SVG files, or as pixel-based JPEG files. And now, many Adobe Stock vectors, illustrations, and photos are also available for licensing as transparent PNG files.

Why license vectors, illustrations, and photos as PNG files with transparent backgrounds? Simply put, they make it easy to create layered designs. Manually removing a background from an image is a tedious process that can lead to imperfections, but you can quickly layer a transparent PNG onto another image or design, and the background will show through. Plus, you can work with transparent PNGs in creative apps of all kinds, including Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator.

I've purchased a bunch of illustrator vector effects files from a stock image website. I want to be able to have the effects as .pngs (at a large size) so I can use them easily in photoshop, but whenever I try to get rid of the background behind the effects they appear to lose their transparancy (as you can see in the image). The only way I found to be able to keep the effects looking as they should look, is it I export as .psd file, but then you end up with a folder in photoship with hundreds of subfolders and even my new Mac Mini has issues with just moving the effect across the screen. If I could just flatten the vector effect as a .png file I could manipulate it in photoship no problem, but I've not found anyway to do that. Any ideas? I feel like I'm missing something obvious.

The video is interesting, but she basically say's that there's not much you can do with those affects outside of illustrator. I tried what you descirbed but it didn't work. I still think there must be some way to have these effects as .pngs.

The problem is that most stock vector graphics of this style, seem to rely on blending modes more than might be necessary. Usually it's gradients to black, when a gradient to 0% opacity of the main colour would have done the job and been more versatile.

That's strange that the files are like that. You can have the effect in photoshop if you export it as a photoshop file. So I'm going to see what I can do to make that file more manageable inside photoshop, by having less elements either in photoshop of first within illustrator. It's not the ideal solution but it's something.

I did test that As soon as you turn off the checkered background in illustrator, the effects mess up and it doesn't matter what you do after that point. Exporting as a .png or not. But I tested it anyway and of course it didn't work.

That's why exporting as a .psd file (with layers intact) does work, because you are bringing everything into photoshop, including the checkered background, and then inside photoshop you can turn off that background and replace it whatever background you want and the effects look fine. (It's essentially the reverse of just loading in a new background into Illusttrator, behind the vector effects). The only issues is that Photoshop doesn't handle the large amount of folders and subfolders well. So I'll have to work inside illustrator as much as possible and then move to photoshop when I need too.

Please see attached screen shot from inside photoshop. You can see the .png and the green background beyond it, and also that it doesn't make any difference. The .png looks all wrong. Like I say as soon as you turn the checkered background off wihin illustrator it messes up the effect.

Below is a screenshot of one of the effects converted to .psd. As you can see it looks fine, but when you try and move it (drag it), there's so many parts to it, my Mac Mini basically wants to crash. I presumed (hoped) you could just convert the effect in illustrator to a .png but evidently that's not possible. Flattening it inside photoshop gives you the same problems as doing it inside Illustrator.

So I bought this smoke vector image (left). When I copy and paste it to my own file it looks different. I also tried copying the smoke with the background but it also changes after pasting it into my own file. The transparency of both images are the same. Some smoke parts are 50% some 70%.

Just to be clear on what's happening: the red wavy thing is the vector art, and that blue wormy thing is just to indicate that any other color (like blue) renders fine on the black thing ? (It is still selected in your second image.) I'm also curious to get my hands on that file, in stead of offering a dozen speculations and suggestions. It must be simple...

In this article, we highlight the three best ways to remove backgrounds in Adobe Illustrator and show you a much better way of erasing backgrounds from your images while preserving their fine details.

Since its launch in 1987, Adobe Illustrator has become the industry standard for making art-related creative materials. The tool is best for editing vectorized graphics like logos, typefaces, illustrations, and infographics. But, compared to Photoshop, there are only a few methods for deleting image backgrounds.

Using the Image Trace feature involves vectorizing the image before removing the unwanted background. This method is most suitable when your image has a simple or plain background. The more colorful your picture's background, the more time it takes to select and delete the colors.

Photoshop Gurus is a community of graphic designers that focuses on to the exchange of ideas and information relating to all aspects of image editing. We welcome users of all skill levels and backgrounds.

I downloaded a bunch of .eps vector images of light flares over dark, transparent backgrounds on gettyimages. I now want to place those transparent flares over my images, but can't recall (or maybe I never knew... barely ever use these, though) how to convert the vector into a readily usable smart object or png or whatever.

I figured it out! So first in illustrator delete the checkered background like you did in the image above. Then, copy and paste what's left into photoshop as a smart object. It will still have the black behind it. Go into your layer mode and select "Screen". That should get rid of the black and make the light effect work on any background you have. Sometimes if theres a lot of objects withing the light flare to move over, it wont work on all of them. So if that happens and some of them still show the black ring, delete out and copy those in separately with the same blend mode. 0852c4b9a8

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