Preserved Topic: Help! TIFF pictures with transparent background have white one in Quark??? (Page 1 of 1) |
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Nervous Wreck (II) Inmate From: |
posted 02-08-2002 22:00
Hello All, |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: Mi, USA |
posted 02-08-2002 22:03 |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: The Soft Cell |
posted 02-08-2002 22:25
vogonpoet is quite right. This one foxed me for months after I was dropped into my job at the deep end with little knowledge of photoshop. A closed clipping path tightly rendered around the image will indeed preserve a transparant background. you can also make clipping path 'holes' within the main picture to produce further transparent patches on your image |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: in media rea |
posted 02-08-2002 22:33
Hmm...this topic has popped up three times...so I'm thinking it's a bit superfluous here. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: We discovered Greenland. |
posted 02-08-2002 22:35
Indesign 2.0 |
Nervous Wreck (II) Inmate From: |
posted 02-08-2002 22:46
Thank you so much, vogonpoet and Morph, for your quick replies! |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: in media rea |
posted 02-08-2002 22:48
Often times you can make a selection of your ...uh...selection (shut up..I just woke up...just shut the f#$k up) by doing the old Ctrl key+Click method and then convert the selection to a clipping path. This will give you a rough path for your transparency...then go in and tweak your bezier curves by hand (as it were). |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: The Soft Cell |
posted 02-08-2002 23:01
Use your pen tool to draw around your image until the path is closed |
Paranoid (IV) Mad Scientist From: 8675309 |
posted 02-08-2002 23:09
I don't have the time or patience to go through how to draw a clipping path right now. Read in your manual about the pen/path tools...that will help you understand better. |
Nervous Wreck (II) Inmate From: |
posted 02-08-2002 23:54
Many thanks to you all for your friendly and detailed instructions! |
Nervous Wreck (II) Inmate From: |
posted 02-09-2002 00:00
PS: Forgot to ask something else... Just an idea... What if I save my PS-images in EPS format, will they then have a transparent background when printed from Quark? If yes, could it be an alternative equal to creating a clipping path as you described above? Or is this a completely diffetent pair of shoes? |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Boston, MA, USA |
posted 02-09-2002 02:23
Sorry to say, PostScript doesn't understand transparency the way Photoshop uses it. Or layers for that matter. Saving a file with a "transparent background" means layers. When you flatten it (to get a tiff) - no more layers, and no more transparency. That's just how PostScript works. (At least as far as I know) |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: The Soft Cell |
posted 02-09-2002 02:42
Cant say I've tried a clipping path on an eps and I don't have quark on this machine but hey, why don't you try it val |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Milwaukee |
posted 02-09-2002 02:57
Just remember that once you've imported the EPS into Quark, you want to select it with the Object tool, hit Ctrl-M for Modify, find the Clipping Path tab, and make sure the correct path is selected. It'll help you out if you give the clipping path a logical name back on the Photoshop side of the fence. |
Nervous Wreck (II) Inmate From: |
posted 02-09-2002 22:55
Thanks a million to you all - Steve, Morph and Perfect Thunder - for your valuable advice! I sincerely appreciate your kind help! |