Do all of the work on your image in the RGB format that the Gimp will
start you out with. If you are in a situation where you must save your
image often, saving in the Gimps native format "xcf" saves the most
information and is the least hassle. The very last step before the
"Save" should be the
: Martin Edlman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Date: vendredi 06 octobre 2000 14:03
À: COUTIER Eric
Objet: Little off-topic: PNG in browsers - Was: Low Quality Gifs
COUTIER Eric wrote:
>
> The palette you've used to make your gif image is not good. To correct
this,
> open your png file,
hi,
> I've a question too: ie4 seem not support png format. In fact, when i've
> clicked on you png link below, ie4 has asked to me if i want to "save or
> open the file", and hasn't displayed it. Why ?
because, as you said, IE4 doesnt support PNG. there are updates around,
but its better to mov
hi,
> As an example http://www.stutchbury.com/images/projects.gif versus a similar
> image in PNG format at http://www.stutchbury.com/images/projects_d.png .
>
> It is on the conversion to 'indexed' that the degradation occurs.
>
> Any ideas?
sure that your PNG image is also being shrunk down
Are you converting to indexed before or after merging all layers? The less
colors you give it the better job it can do, so flatten out the colors from
non-visable layers.
e
clicked on you png link below, ie4 has asked to me if i want to "save or
open the file", and hasn't displayed it. Why ?
-Message d'origine-
De: Philip Fletcher [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Date: vendredi 06 octobre 2000 13:34
À: gimp-user
Objet: Low Quality Gifs
Hi
I hav
Hi
I have been trying to create gifs with transparent backgrounds for use on my
website. No real problems (RTFM'd) with that, but the quality is appalling
in both colour and resolution.
As an example http://www.stutchbury.com/images/projects.gif versus a similar
image in PNG format at http://ww