Artemỉs wrote:Personally, I'd just open an art program and manually erase the white pixels, or just find a better quality image.
I started to do it that way, but erasing only the white pixels without making the edges look grainy proved to be tedious... I might end up having to finish doing it that way though...
caesou wrote:i'm not sure how well this might work, but you could also select (with the magic wand) the transparent background, invert the selection and contract (or whatever the program might call it, it's the opposite of expand) a few pixels and then erase? make sure the wand thing is on anti-aliasing unless if you're working with a pixel-art kind of image.
if this fails, follow what artemis suggested or try something creative - like a white outline or glow around the image to hide the light pixels
Hm, I'm not sure if there's a way to do the first procedure you described with the program I'm using, but a white glow around the image is a good idea! I'll try that, thanks~