Transparency Cleaner: remove faint semi-transparent pixels
Finds partially see-through pixels (faint halos, edge shadows) and either highlights or removes them. Fixes soft halos that look bad in print.
After background removal, some images have a faint halo of semi-transparent pixels around the subject β pixels that aren't fully solid and aren't fully see-through, but somewhere in between.
Those faint pixels look fine on screen. But when you upload your design to a print-on-demand site, they print as soft gray edges or color shadows around your subject. Transparency Cleaner finds them and gives you control to clean them up.
Why this step matters
Print-on-demand quality depends on clean transparent edges. Faint pixels that survived your background removal step turn into:
- Light gray or soft-color halos around your shirt design
- "Ghost" pixels that show up faintly on a colored mug
- Soft outlines that don't match your design's actual shape
Add Transparency Cleaner after your background removal step and these go away in one pass.
How to use it
- Add Transparency Cleaner to your pipeline (most useful right after Color Removal or Speckle Remover).
- Set the Threshold β how transparent a pixel has to be before it counts as "faint."
- Use View mode first to see which pixels would be removed (highlighted in a bright color).
- Switch to Delete mode to actually remove them.
The settings
How to pick the right Threshold
It depends on what's in your image and how aggressive you want to be:
Start at 30, view the result, adjust up or down by 10 until the edges look right.
Tips
- Use View mode first. Always. The Threshold's effect varies a lot per image.
- Order matters in your pipeline: Color Removal β Trim β Speckle Remover β Transparency Cleaner gives the cleanest result. Each step builds on the previous.
- For a batch with mixed content (some images have soft edges you want to keep, others are solid shapes), use a low-to-medium Threshold (20-30) so you don't accidentally erase important soft detail.
- Pair with Edge Feather in Color Removal. They do opposite things β Edge Feather softens hard edges; Transparency Cleaner removes soft edges. Use Edge Feather if you want softness, Transparency Cleaner if you don't.
- For print designs, Transparency Cleaner is almost always worth running. Soft halos are the #1 reason POD designs print with weird outlines.
Things Transparency Cleaner doesn't do
- It doesn't change fully solid pixels. Anything that's 100% opaque is safe β only semi-transparent pixels are touched.
- It doesn't work on images with no transparency. If you haven't run Color Removal yet, every pixel is fully opaque and there's nothing for this tool to find.
- It can't decide what's "intentional" softness vs unwanted halo. Hair, fur, and soft edges look identical to it. If your design has intentional softness you want to keep, use a low Threshold.
- It doesn't sharpen edges. It just removes faint pixels. For aggressively cleaning up jagged edges, the Edge Trim setting in Color Removal is the right tool.
What to read next
- Color Removal β almost always run before Transparency Cleaner (creates the transparency it cleans)
- Speckle Remover β paired cleanup tool for stray pixels
- Quality issues β when output has visible halos or soft edges