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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS 9

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USING <strong>PHOTOSHOP</strong> <strong>ELEMENTS</strong> 9<br />

Optimizing for the web<br />

277<br />

PNG-24 Like JPEG, this is a good format for photographs. Choose PNG-24 rather than JPEG only when your image<br />

contains transparency. (JPEG does not support transparency; you must fill it with a matte color.) PNG-24 files are<br />

often much larger than JPEG files of the same image.<br />

GIF GIF is the format to use for line art, illustrations with large areas of solid color and crisp detail, and text. Also, if<br />

you want to export an animated image, you must use GIF.<br />

PNG-8 PNG-8 is a lesser-known alternative to GIF. Use it for the same purposes (except animation).<br />

Images in GIF and PNG-8 formats, sometimes called indexed-color images, can display up to 256 colors. To convert<br />

an image to indexed-color format, Photoshop Elements builds a color lookup table. If a color in the original image does<br />

not appear in the color lookup table, the application either chooses the closest color in the table or simulates the color<br />

using a combination of available colors.<br />

JPEG and PNG-24 files support 24-bit color, so they can display up to 16 million colors. Depending on the format, you<br />

can specify image quality, background transparency or matting, color display, and the method a browser should use<br />

to display the image while downloading.<br />

The appearance of an image on the web also depends on the colors displayed by the computer platform, operating<br />

system, monitor, and browser. You may want to preview images in different browsers and on different platforms to<br />

see how they will appear on the web.<br />

About the JPEG format<br />

The JPEG format supports 24-bit color, so it preserves the subtle variations in brightness and hue found in<br />

photographs. A progressive JPEG file displays a low-resolution version of the image in the web browser while the full<br />

image is downloading.<br />

JPEG image compression is called lossy because it selectively discards image data. A higher quality setting results in<br />

less data being discarded, but the JPEG compression method may still degrade sharp detail in an image, particularly<br />

in images containing type or vector art.<br />

Note: Artifacts, such as wavelike patterns or blocky areas of banding, are created each time you save an image in JPEG<br />

format. Therefore, you should always save JPEG files from the original image, not from a previously saved JPEG.<br />

Original image (left), and optimized JPEG with Low quality setting (right)<br />

The JPEG format does not support transparency. When you save an image as a JPEG file, transparent pixels are filled<br />

with the matte color specified in the Save For Web dialog box. To simulate the effect of background transparency, you<br />

can match the matte color to the web page background color. If your image contains transparency and you do not<br />

know the web page background color, or if the background is a pattern, you should use a format that supports<br />

transparency (GIF, PNG-8, or PNG-24).<br />

More Help topics<br />

“Create a matted GIF or PNG image” on page 284<br />

Last updated 1/27/2011

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