That would have been a vector image originally. If you can find that as an svg you will get the best results, however
The usual way is by color selection, often with growing the selection by a pixel or 2 to eliminate the occasional anti-aliased pixels.
For that particular image with those drop shadows not a wonderful result, so this method works, erasing the light grey with the paint tool in color erase mode.
08-18-2017, 11:03 AM (This post was last modified: 08-26-2017, 07:15 PM by rich2005.)
(08-18-2017, 10:47 AM)rich2005 Wrote: That would have been a vector image originally. If you can find that as an svg you will get the best results, however
The usual way is by color selection, often with growing the selection by a pixel or 2 to eliminate the occasional anti-aliased pixels.
For that particular image with those drop shadows not a wonderful result, so this method works, erasing the light grey with the paint tool in color erase mode.
A few steps involved, so this demo video: https://youtu.be/Cwxd0Hayq68 no longer neded
While replacing a background is very common, and there are any number of ways to achieve that using Gimp.
Simple logos are easily recreated as vectors using Inkscape, even with Gimp all you need is a single arrow as a path, the other parts are duplicates moved or rotated. Then for each path it is Path to Selection -> fill the selection.