Start Searching the Answers
The Internet has many places to ask questions about anything imaginable and find past answers on almost everything.
The Question & Answer (Q&A) Knowledge Managenet
The Internet has many places to ask questions about anything imaginable and find past answers on almost everything.
Saving a Transparent PNG
To change the background color in iPhoto, launch the program and head over to Preferences. Hit the “Appearance” tab in the dialog box and move the slider — moving to the extreme left promotes black background on iPhoto while the white background appears if you move the slider to the right.
You can brush in locally changes of color, contrast, saturation, sharpness, dodge and burn, etc. So you could change the background color from yellow to white by brushing the saturation away. But Aperture is not meant as a tool for graphics compositing. It is a photo editor and organizer.
How to adjust the background blur after taking a photo
Blur out faces in iPhone photos with Blur Photo Effect Background
Open the Signal app and tap the camera icon. Take a photo or view an image saved on your phone to open the image editor. The blur tool will appear as a circular icon with mosaic squares at the top of the editor menu, like in the above screenshot. Tap the icon to automatically blur any faces in the photo.
Let’s take a look at some of the best apps that can help you blur a face in just a few easy steps.
Use Insert > Shape to draw a shape over the area you want to blur. On the Format tab, select Shape Fill > Eyedropper. With the Eyedropper, click a part of the picture whose color approximates the color you want the blurred shape to be. On the Format tab, select Shape Effects > Soft Edges.
Open the Camera app and swipe to Portrait mode. Follow the tips on your screen. When Portrait mode is ready, the name of the lighting effect, such as Natural Light, turns yellow. Tap the Shutter button .
You can add portrait mode to any photo with this new Google Photos update. Most recent iPhones and Androids have portrait mode, which focuses on the subject and blurs the background, making a photo look like it was taken with a high-end DSLR camera.