Picking source images that clean up well

When you're sourcing images from stock libraries, marketplaces, or customers, what to look for so Color Removal works in one click.

You're not always generating your own images. You might be:

  • Buying from stock libraries (Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, iStock)
  • Downloading from design marketplaces (Creative Market, Envato, Etsy digital downloads)
  • Receiving customer-supplied images for custom work
  • Pulling from free libraries (Unsplash, Pexels, Pixabay)
  • Using AI-generated assets from someone else

This article covers what to look for when you're sourcing β€” so you pick images that Color Removal handles in one click instead of fighting them in cleanup.

The 4 things to check before downloading

Before you commit to an image (or pay for it), check:

CheckWhat to look for
1. Is the background a single solid color?Click in to a 1:1 preview. Solid white, solid black, solid gray are best.
2. Does the background color appear in the subject?Same check as the 3 rules β€” the background shouldn't be a color that's anywhere in the subject.
3. Is the resolution at least 1500px on the short side?Lower than this and you'll have trouble making it big enough for upload-ready output.
4. Is there an "isolated" or "transparent PNG" filter on the source?Many stock libraries let you filter for "isolated objects" or "PNG with transparent background" β€” use it.

If an image fails check 1 or 2, look for an alternative.

Stock library filters that help

Most stock libraries have search filters that pre-narrow to images that work well for Color Removal. Use them.

Adobe Stock:

  • Filter: "Isolated" under "Composition" β†’ forces results to subject-on-plain-background
  • Filter: "Transparent background" under "Format" β†’ pre-cut PNGs (best β€” no Color Removal needed)

Shutterstock:

  • Filter: "With background only" vs "Isolated only" under refinement panel
  • Filter: "PNG" under file type β†’ many of these have transparent backgrounds

Freepik / Vecteezy:

  • Filter: "Vector" or "PSD" β†’ vectors have built-in transparent backgrounds, usable directly without cleanup

iStock:

  • Filter: "On white" in style filters β†’ forces solid white backgrounds

Unsplash / Pexels (free):

  • Search includes terms like "isolated on white", "isolated on black", "transparent background" in your query string. Free libraries don't have format filters but search-term tweaking gets you there.

Look for these explicit phrases in titles / descriptions

Stock library descriptions often tell you exactly what you need. Look for:

  • "Isolated on white"
  • "Isolated on black"
  • "Cut out"
  • "With clipping path"
  • "PNG with transparent background"
  • "On plain background"

If you see any of these, the image will likely clean up easily (or it's already pre-cut and needs no cleanup).

Avoid these phrases / image types

  • "Lifestyle" β€” usually means subject in a real environment, busy background
  • "Scene" / "Setting" β€” same β€” busy background
  • "In hand" β€” has a hand and arm to deal with, plus whatever's behind
  • "On a wood surface" / "On marble" / "On a textured background" β€” non-solid background
  • "Mood" / "Moody" β€” usually has dramatic gradient lighting

These can be great for marketing imagery but they're hard for Color Removal.

Customer-supplied images

When customers send you images for custom work (POD, embroidery, custom prints), you usually can't pick what they send. Tactics:

Set expectations up front. When you ask the customer for an image, give them a one-line spec: "Please send a clear image of your subject on a plain solid background, ideally white, gray, or black." Most customers can do this if asked.

Spec a minimum resolution. "At least 2000 pixels on the short side" β€” prevents customers sending tiny phone screenshots.

Have a fallback plan. If the customer's image is unsalvageable, have a polite reply ready: "I can work with this, but I'll need to charge a small extra fee for [extra cleanup work / time]. Or, if you can re-send a clearer version, I can use that at no extra charge."

For chronically bad customer images, the AI Background Removal (15 credits per use) handles them better than Color Removal can. Worth the credits for one-off custom orders.

Free library quick recommendations

If you're starting out and don't have a stock library budget:

LibraryStrengthsLook for
UnsplashReal-world images, many "isolated" subjectsSearch "product image white background"
PexelsReal-world images + illustrationsSame β€” search includes "on white background"
PixabayImage + illustration + vectorFilter to Vector β€” has transparent backgrounds
Freepik (free tier)Heavily filtered for design-ready assetsFilter to PNG with transparent background
Open Peeps / Open DoodlesHand-drawn illustration setsAlready PNG with transparent background

Test before you commit (especially for paid stock)

Before you spend $10-20 per image on a paid stock library:

  1. Save a watermarked preview (most stock sites let you do this for free)
  2. Drop it into ReadyPixl
  3. Run Color Removal at defaults
  4. Look at the result. If the watermarked preview cleans up well, the full-resolution version will clean even better.

This 30-second test saves you from buying images that don't work for your pipeline.

Building your own library

If you're sourcing the same kinds of images repeatedly (e.g., always icons, always botanical illustrations, always emoji-style stickers):

  • Find a library that consistently does it well. Bookmark it.
  • Save your "winning sources" in a doc β€” which providers, which collections, which keywords.
  • Combine with a ReadyPixl preset β€” same source style + same pipeline = consistent batch every time.

The ROI of doing this once is enormous. You'll come back to the same library + same preset for years.

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