uncle808us Posted June 4, 2016 Share Posted June 4, 2016 Sometimes I want to erase a white background so I use filter/color/erase white paper but sometimes the makes certain parts of the image transparent (white stuff grey stuff etc) how can I repair these sections? Thanks Hope this question is clear enough . Quote Mac MacBook Pro 15 in. OS X 10.9.5, Mid 2012 456.77 GB Affinity Design and Photo. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
anon1 Posted June 4, 2016 Share Posted June 4, 2016 1 you can duplicate the layer before doing the "erase white paper" filter 2 apply the "erase white paper" on the bottom image 3a add a mask to the top image, invert mask 4a paint white on the mask in the areas you want to bring back or 3b use blend ranges of the top image, go to "source layer range" and adjust the right side downwards so that the bright parts are not opaque, you can also use this and masks in conjunction here is how you use blend if/ blend ranges https://forum.affinity.serif.com/index.php?/topic/17364-blend-if-blend-ranges/?p=79182 or just use blend if of one single layer in first place so that white gets transparent, you can then adjust the graduation yourself instead of using the fixed erase white paper filter I wonder what "erase white paper" does apart from a sort of blend ranges thing anyway? hope that helps :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JimmyJack Posted June 4, 2016 Share Posted June 4, 2016 Erase White Paper should really be called Erase "L" Value.... which is what it does (AFAI can tell). If you want it to use it to actually "erase white paper", it should only be applied on purely black and white imagery. Otherwise it'll give you levels of transparency :o . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Staff MEB Posted June 5, 2016 Staff Share Posted June 5, 2016 Hi uncle808us The Erase White Filter is indeed intended to be used to literally "erase white paper" from scanned drawings. Although you can use it for other purposes (including colour images) it wasn't designed for that purpose. If you create a selection of the subject you want unaffected by the filter, invert it and shrink as needed, you can use then it to remove the white from colour images too. Quote A Guide to Learning Affinity Software Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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