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How To Remove Background Of An Image Online Without Using Photoshop - Tutorials By SWA
Written By Sohail Waris Awan on Wednesday, 13 November 2013 | 03:50
One of the very first Photoshop skills we learned in my tenth grade
photojournalism class was cropping the background out of images. I hated it. It was extremely time consuming, and the magnetic lasso tool never seemed to want to cooperate with me.
Nearly
a decade later, the tools have gotten better, but there still isn't a
quick and simple way for people without polished photo-editing skills to
remove the background from an image. But James Diebel and Jacob Norda,
the team behind a new free web app called Clipping Magic, hope to change that by doing it for you almost instantaneously.
Clipping
Magic is an online tool that lets you upload a photo and mark the parts
you want to keep and throw away, then does all the hard work for you.
It's still in alpha testing right now, so it's a bit rough, and they haven't quite figured out how to handle things like hair and blurry boundaries yet.
Using
the tool couldn't be much simpler. You start by dragging and dropping a
photo into the uploader, and once you're connected, just show it what
you want removed.
The green brush is used to mark anything you
want to stay in the finished image, and red marks the background you
want taken out. You don't have to completely color in each part—just
enough for the algorithm to pick up what's foreground and what's
background.
The preview pane on the righthand side shows what the end result will look like based on your markup.
Once you're satisfied, you can either download your finished image or choose to share it in a private link.
For
a simple image like the one above, it does a pretty decent job. When it
comes to blurry photos or images with a lot of partially transparent
parts like the one below, the results aren't so good.
The
app can't tell the difference between foreground and background in a
blurry image like this one, so it doesn't know what to crop and what to
keep.
If
you don't mind spending a bit of time, you can fine tune it by using
the zoom tool to get into the tiny spots with smaller brushes and make
it better. Still, even with a little more time spent, this cat image
could use some more work.
Overall,
Clipping Magic is a useful little tool that does a decent job at
simplifying a pretty complicated process. It won't replace a
professional Photoshop job, but it's still a work in progress and the
developers plan on making substantial improvements.
As of right
now, the app is free to use. In the future, when it's out of alpha, it
will likely become a paid service. Be sure to give it a try while it's
free and let us know what you think!
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