TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

Adobe Cs6 - How Can I Convert A Raster Image To Vector

What is the best automate way to convert pixel image to vector image?

Try this online tool Online Image VectorizerVectorizing an image involves finding out the prominent features in the raster part of image and replacing them by arcs, ellipses and other parametric mathematical equations. The above automation software does the same.Or you can try Adobe Photoshop too.

What are the uses of bitmap and vector images?

When it comes to digital graphics, there are two main types of image formats: raster and vector.

Raster images (such as bitmaps) are stored as individual pixels, each with their own color. Vector images (such as flash) are instead stored as simple shapes, lines, and colours that make up the image.

Photos are usually stored as raster as they contain so much complex information that trying to store them as vector would be unneccessarily complex.

Logos and graphical designs are usually stored as vector. Vector also has the advantage that it can be resized without loss of quality.

How can I turn a Photoshop image in to an Illustrator vector?

Turning a Photoshop image into an Illustrator vector is really not a difficult task. You can do that pretty easily by just 2 easiest ways.You can try exporting first. Either export the image as PDF or SVG format. This is really a great option as Illustrator works really well with these formats.Copy/paste is also a good option for turning Photoshop image to Illustrator vector. Open your PSD file. Then, select the layers you want in Graphic. Copy and Paste them directly in Illustrator.

Is it possible to convert a raster graphic into a vector graphic?

I'm not one for buying into the Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop hype. They're prohibitively expensive and yet everyone is expected to use them. What I do to convert raster images to Vector is I use a free image programme called Inkscape. Drag your raster file into an open Inkscape window, click yes to embed it. Then select the image, in the top menu bar click Paths, then trace bitmap. There's a variety of options available in the new window that opens. I usually select Colour, then deselect the first tick box (stack layers), select the second and the third (remove background). Then choose how many colours you want to keep. Now obviously for Vector images, the original image needs to be fairly simple in terms of colour and effects. Trying to turn a photograph into a Vector for example is going to cause serious headaches. Cartoony stuff with flat fill colours, no gradients - that sort of thing is what you want. Choose the number of colours that are in the image, then click OK and it'll convert it to a vector. If you notice a loss of colour in the new image, delete it, select your original image again and up the number of colours you want to keep.I hope that helps. If you need any more help with it then you can Tweet me at @KnightTCreation if you like. :-)

How can I create vector images in Photoshop?

Follow these steps to convert bitmap images in Photoshop into vector images:Open the “Window” menu and select “Paths” to pull up the corresponding panel. You have three choices in the options bar: select the standard Pen tool to create straight lines and Bezier curves over the image. Select the Freeform option for a more organic and loose drawing that you trace over the image. Select the Magnetic Pen to follow transitions of color and brightness within the image.Draw your vector paths over the image until you have a traced conversion of the paths and shapes within your image. Press Enter when you are done tracing a path to signal the end of the pathway.Select further pathways utilizing the Lasso, Marquee, and Magic Wand selection tools. Click the menu button at the top right corner of the “Paths” panel and choose “Make Work Path” to turn each selection into a vector pathway.Set the tolerance level for the pathways. Smaller levels make the path adhere tightly to what you’ve traced, while larger levels displays smooth transitions between anchor points in your path.When you create a new work path be sure to double click the Path name that appears in the “Paths” panel. Accept the default name or name each path. Otherwise new actions will replace vector drawings on the work path with new output.Export vector paths from Photoshop into Illustrator so you can use them across other programs. Click “File” à “Export” à “Paths to Illustrator.”Reference: How can I "vectorize" an image?

How can I save an image in vector format with photoshop?

Although you can work with vector shapes in Photoshop, Photoshop itself is a pixel/raster based program. You cannot take an image created in Photoshop and just save it as a vector file. When you save the Photoshop image to one that can be printed, you would be flattening all your layers and rasterizing (converting to pixels) any vectors that you used. It's the nature of Photoshop.

You would need Adobe Illustrator to truly create vector-based images. There is a free alternative, it's called Inkscape. Here's the link to the FAQ about Inkscape.
http://wiki.inkscape.org/wiki/index.php/...

Hope this helps.

Is there any way to convert fla files to gimp version i mean like flash decompiler?

"Flash Decompiler" is software to convert SWF to FLA files, so you can open them in Adobe Flash and edit the ActionScript - it doesn't create files you can open in Photoshop.

You can't open flash files in Photoshop or GIMP. These are raster image editors. They can only open raster image files, or rasterize vector files such as PDF or EPS. FLA is a format which not only includes vector images, but also contains the programming code called ActionScript.

The software that opens FLA files is Adobe Flash - there is no alternative software because Flash is owned by Adobe. You could likely copy and paste graphic images from Flash directly into Photoshop, but since Adobe owns the format, I have no idea if that would work with GIMP. In any case, Photoshop will rasterize whatever you copy and paste into it.

Here's the link to Adobe Flash Professional CS5 - the current incarnation of Flash.
http://www.adobe.com/products/flash.html

TRENDING NEWS