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smurf4t1
Participant
August 6, 2012
Question

How do I make the background transparent in JPeg

  • August 6, 2012
  • 2 replies
  • 60989 views

I have photographed an item in raw and edited in photoshop and saved it as a Jpeg. In PS elements 10 . It seems like the background is transparent how ever if i open the item in another program like word it does not have a transparent background. What am I doing wrong ? Do I need to save it in a different format ? Thank you

This topic has been closed for replies.

2 replies

GPbkk
Participant
September 2, 2018

1) Open in Photoshop and remove background manually.

2) Save the file as png with transparent bg.

3) Open the png with Acrobat Pro and save as pdf.

This "pdf" can be inserted in any other picture or other file and will appear without bg.

August 6, 2012

JPG does not support transparency.  You need to save your file as a PNG file.  (PNG-24 if you're using Save For Web.)  TIF files are much larger, but support transparency also.

Ken

smurf4t1
smurf4t1Author
Participant
August 6, 2012

Thank you, can those files be edited by someone else in those formats? I took the photos edited them and someone else is going to use them to make a poster.

MichelBParis
Legend
September 2, 2018

Here is a screen shot of my photoshop file (missing a piece-- there was a silhouettte of the mans image but it reflected the "eclipse 1", some how it got erased.. btw this file no longer creates the image without transperencies... unfortunately something happened to my file as I was playing around with it. .. so this will not give you the results.. but maybe save some people time... those that are trying to figure out how to do this??)

So I was trying to figure out the same thing as you and I did it by accident. Unfortunately I tried so many things at the same time (in photoshop) that I don't remember how I actually made the jpeg with transparencies. For anyone who doesn't beleive it, I took a screen shot of my file. Here shows the image in an illustrator file. Hopefully someone can crack the code as to how to get this done! (second image -- might help someone figure it out?)


I am aware that this is an old discussion, but I think that what Sheila Saa is describing deserves an explanation.

The jpeg format can store a single "clipping path' which enables Photoshop to 'crop' the jpeg for further use. This is shown in the screen shot, there is an 'alpha' channel.

I think that practically nobody uses that today, it's so easy to save as PNG.

The problem for Elements is that it does not natively manage paths (no paths panel). I have been able to save and restore such 'clipped' jpegs using the scripts in Elements+ but I think it's rather an academic solution. The process probably worked well for a Photoshop user sending files to other Photoshop users for printing. I reported this some time ago, but I could not even attach a clipped file, the clipping path was not kept in the process.