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Previewing and controlling dithering


    Most Web images are created by designers using using 24-bit color displays (which display over 16 million colors), but some users view Web pages on computers with 8-bit color displays (which display only 256 colors). As a result, Web images often contain colors not available on some computers. Computers use a technique called dithering to simulate colors they can't display. Dithering uses adjacent pixels of different colors to give the appearance of a third color. For example, a red color and a yellow color may dither in a mosaic pattern to produce the illusion of an orange color that the 8-bit color palette doesn't contain.

    When optimizing images, keep in mind that two kinds of dithering can occur:

    • Application dither occurs in GIF and PNG-8 images when Photoshop Elements attempts to simulate colors that aren't in the current color table. You can control application dither by choosing a dithering pattern, or you can try to avoid application dither by adding more colors to the table.
    • Browser dither occurs when a Web browser using an 8-bit color display (256-color mode) attempts to simulate colors that aren't in the 8-bit color palette. Browser dither can occur with GIF, PNG, or JPEG images. In Photoshop Elements, you can control the amount of browser dither by shifting selected colors in the image to Web-safe colors. You can also specify Web-safe colors when choosing a color in the Adobe Color Picker.

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