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Here’s a scenario that I find myself in occasionally.
Today I created a simple graphic logo for a company’s website. If I save it as a GIF with a color table of 16 colors, it looks perfect. But now I’ve got to incorporate a small photograph with it. Saving it as a JPEG will make the logo part look fuzzy. So I increase the size of the color table to include (at least some of) the colors in the photo.
But the new larger color table has NOT included all of the colors necessary to give me my good-looking logo. It has included a few, but most of the colors have been re-assigned to colors within the photo.
I’d like to somehow save the color table that is created without the photo, then save the result as a GIF using a much larger color table, but keeping the colors that were in the original.
I’ve probably done an abysmal job explaining this, but if anyone can help.
BTW – I’m using 5.5 on MS Windows.
Today I created a simple graphic logo for a company’s website. If I save it as a GIF with a color table of 16 colors, it looks perfect. But now I’ve got to incorporate a small photograph with it. Saving it as a JPEG will make the logo part look fuzzy. So I increase the size of the color table to include (at least some of) the colors in the photo.
But the new larger color table has NOT included all of the colors necessary to give me my good-looking logo. It has included a few, but most of the colors have been re-assigned to colors within the photo.
I’d like to somehow save the color table that is created without the photo, then save the result as a GIF using a much larger color table, but keeping the colors that were in the original.
I’ve probably done an abysmal job explaining this, but if anyone can help.
BTW – I’m using 5.5 on MS Windows.
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