doctorChuckles
Programmer
Hi. Me again.
I have an animated .gif, consisting mostly of a line drawing and some text on a transparent background. I've toyed with the notion of displaying it on top of a background image.
When displayed in the browser on top of a dark background image, the black lines and text have a light-colored fringe around them. Very unattractive and distracting.
At first I thought there might be some white colored pixels next to the black lines and text, but I'm not so sure now.
I went back to the multi-layer Photoshop document from which the animated .gif was made. I de-fringed the image, just in case, and put a dark colored layer behind it. No sign of any white pixels. I tried saving the whole thing with ImageReady, then examined the resulting .gif, in PhotoShop. No sign of a white fringe.
But... If I remove the dark background from the Photoshop document, save the thing as a new animated .gif and display it in the browser, in front of a dark background image, I get the white fringe again.
I'm beginning to suspect the image is okay, but the browser isn't able to display this sort of thing correctly. Just a guess.
If you've got any thoughts, suggestions or troubleshooting tips... Please pass them on.
Cheers,
Tim
I have an animated .gif, consisting mostly of a line drawing and some text on a transparent background. I've toyed with the notion of displaying it on top of a background image.
When displayed in the browser on top of a dark background image, the black lines and text have a light-colored fringe around them. Very unattractive and distracting.
At first I thought there might be some white colored pixels next to the black lines and text, but I'm not so sure now.
I went back to the multi-layer Photoshop document from which the animated .gif was made. I de-fringed the image, just in case, and put a dark colored layer behind it. No sign of any white pixels. I tried saving the whole thing with ImageReady, then examined the resulting .gif, in PhotoShop. No sign of a white fringe.
But... If I remove the dark background from the Photoshop document, save the thing as a new animated .gif and display it in the browser, in front of a dark background image, I get the white fringe again.
I'm beginning to suspect the image is okay, but the browser isn't able to display this sort of thing correctly. Just a guess.
If you've got any thoughts, suggestions or troubleshooting tips... Please pass them on.
Cheers,
Tim