You can copy the image and paste it into your image editor to confirm. If the background is transparent (invisible) then you’ve found a real transparent image. Start dragging the image anywhere but don’t drop it.Click into a specific image so you see the preview of it on the side.Search for something you’re interested in such as: lamps png.In my opinion it’s needed for Google because their transparent filter is less accurate, a large percentage of images that it says are transparent aren’t. ![]() DuckDuckGo has a “transparent type” filter that works quite well so this method isn’t needed. Let us know in the comments.Īlso, it’s specific to Google’s image search. I tested it with Firefox where it didn’t work and someone mentioned it didn’t work with Brave, but it may work with others. This specifically applies to using Chrome because not all browsers support it. This process repeats itself half a dozen times and eventually you find something. Your world is crushed as you continue your quest to find an alternative image. You’re greeted by a literal checker box pattern as its background and your image editing tool’s magic wand isn’t sophisticated enough to remove it without making the image have a bunch of jagged edges. So you happily download it and open it in your image editor to find that while it’s a png it’s really not transparent. It has the usual transparent checker box pattern.Remember that time when you were doing a Google image search looking for a transparent logo or object? You found the perfect one: Updated on January 24th, 2023 in #dev-environment Quickly Check If a Google Image Is Really Transparent or Not No longer get tricked by fake PNG files that have checker box patterns as their background when searching for a transparent image.
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