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Known Participant
April 6, 2022
Answered

How to deal with alpha channel?

  • April 6, 2022
  • 4 replies
  • 1560 views

I still use Ron Scott's QFX (anyone know that?) for alpha channel work on uncompressed tiffs.  The reason is, QFX has a nice batch queue scripting language and I can load, save and do boolean operations on alpha.  In a few moments I can process hundreds of images blazingly fast.

 

I've never been able to figure out how to do anything in Photoshop with alpha channel.  Any search on the subject doesn't reveal much.  Say I have an 8 bit tiff and I want to insert that as alpha into a 24 bit tiff, then save it as a 32 bit tiff.  How the heck is that accomplished?

 

Thanks in advance.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer D Fosse

Copy the source image. Select all > Copy.

 

Then go to the file where you want to use it as alpha channel. Target the alpha if you already have one. Paste. Done.

 

If you don't have an existing alpha channel, add one as Brad describes. Target it. Paste. Done.

4 replies

Stephen Marsh
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 6, 2022

@buck-w 
It would be helpful if you can provide before and after images or explain in simple steps.

buck-wAuthor
Known Participant
April 6, 2022

I'm not sure what you are talking about.  I don't know how to do it in PS yet, so I have nothing to show.  The example I wrote about in the original post is about as simple as it gets.  If you are talking about the boolean stuff, in QFX, I can take an image with alpha, then replace the alpha, or intersect it with another alpha, do a union between the two or, what I most do, subtract one alpha from the other.  The image shows QFX's Alpha menu and queue where I can loop process a numbered sequence with a few lines of script.  (Yep, that program has been out of print for a good while.)

 

I do this stuff on image sequences rendered out of 3ds Max animation software, so I'm not talking about general photo work, but specialized manipulation of 3D image sequences.

Stephen Marsh
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 6, 2022

@buck-w wrote:

I'm not sure what you are talking about. 

 

🙂 That goes for both of us then!

 


I don't know how to do it in PS yet, so I have nothing to show. The example I wrote about in the original post is about as simple as it gets.

 

The screenshot that you have provided is a good start. I meant a before-after screenshot result of the actual image input (x2 files) and output (x1) file... Or even better, the original images and the combined image so that those interested in helping you can see what is going on firsthand. Writing about something visual can be hard – a picture is worth a thousand words!

 

A download link to a file-sharing site would be best, such as your Adobe CC shares, DropBox, OneDrive, GoogleDrive or one of many other services.

 


If you are talking about the boolean stuff, in QFX, I can take an image with alpha, then replace the alpha, or intersect it with another alpha, do a union between the two or, what I most do, subtract one alpha from the other.  The image shows QFX's Alpha menu and queue where I can loop process a numbered sequence with a few lines of script.  (Yep, that program has been out of print for a good while.)

 

I do this stuff on image sequences rendered out of 3ds Max animation software, so I'm not talking about general photo work, but specialized manipulation of 3D image sequences.


 

3D is not my area, but that shouldn't matter if you can provide samples that can be reproduced in Photoshop.

Semaphoric
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 6, 2022

Once you have the Alpha channels, be sure to check out Image > Calculations.

buck-wAuthor
Known Participant
April 6, 2022

Sound like you might be suggesting I can do some of those boolean operations.

Brad @ Roaring Mouse
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 6, 2022

Further to @D Fosse's answer, open up your Channels palette for the image, and if there isn't currently an alpha channel, click on the dropdown pancake icon to Add one (New Channel)

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 6, 2022

The trick is to target the alpha channel in the Channels panel. To do that, just click it in the panel. Then you can do anything to it, just like any other image.  Copy the first image and paste it into the destination alpha, that's all it takes.

 

Whether you want the other RGB channels visible or not during this, is optional. Turn on or off with the eye icon. If RGB is visible, the alpha channel appears as a red overlay. Otherwise, it's black and white.

buck-wAuthor
Known Participant
April 6, 2022

Thanks for the info. I look forward to getting a handle on this.