Apple's New Cutout Tool Magically Isolates Subjects and Removes Backgrounds from Images on Your iPhone or iPad « iOS & iPhone :: Gadget Hacks

2022-09-03 02:21:25 By : Ms. Alex Lee

Apple's upcoming iOS 16 and iPadOS 16 software updates bring an exciting new feature that lets you instantly lift the subject out of a photo, separating it from the background. Once extracted, you can paste, save, or drop the cutout wherever you want as a new image, and you can even make it a sticker in messaging apps.

Before, you would have to use a third-party app like Erase.bg or Photoshop Express on your iPhone or iPad to cut out the subject in the photo automatically. Now, you can easily lift and cut out objects in pictures without needing an extra app. Apple has built the feature into iOS 16, iPadOS 16, and macOS 13, and it works inside Photos, Files, Messages, Safari, and apps that utilize Quick Look, as well as in screenshots.

Apple's demonstration, seen below, shows how a dog can be isolated from the background in a photo and then dragged and dropped into the Messages app.

If you were to print a picture of your pet and perfectly cut around it with scissors, you could put the cutout anywhere. That's the same concept in iOS and iPadOS 16. When you cut out a subject using Apple's new feature, you are erasing the photo's background, making everything around the cutout transparent, and saving the result as a new image in PNG format, a file type that supports transparent backgrounds.

It feels like magic. It's actually the product of an advanced machine learning model, which is accelerated by CoreML and the Neural Engine to perform 40 billion operations in just milliseconds.

You can cut out an object or object from all types of image files, including screenshots, JPEGs, portraits, Live Photos, RAW files, videos, and more. There should be an obvious separation between objects and the background or it might not work no matter the file type.

Apple's iOS 16 and iPadOS 16 are in beta right now and aren't expected to come out to everyone until this fall. You can always install the beta on your iPhone or iPad to try the new cutout tool and other features out right now if you can't wait.

The tool uses a lot of background processing power to cut out subjects from photos, so don't expect it to work perfectly during the beta period. I've had issues cutting out subjects from animated images with busy backdrops, and it only seems to sometimes work in Live Photos. However, things will improve as Apple pushes through the beta.

The feature only works on devices with an A12 Bionic chip or newer, as seen in the lists below. This means the feature won't work on the iPhone X, iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, and several iPad models.

Not to make things confusing, but there are a few ways you can cut an object out of a photo in iOS and iPadOS 16. The method you'll use depends on your app and how you view the photo or video.

For portraits and any non-moving picture formats, use whichever method below is most appropriate. The same goes for Live Photos, but it may take a few tries before it works. You could also turn off "Live" for the Live Photo to try the cutout function on a still version of the image. For videos, you need to pause the video and make sure the object is clean.

The more prominent the separation is between objects and the background, the easier it will be to cut things out. If the image or video is blurry, you may be unable to isolate anything.

Open your image in Photos, Messages, or another supported app. Then, touch and hold the object or objects you want to cut out. Release when you see a glowing line around the subject or subjects. The Copy/Share menu will appear when you let go, and then you can:

Open your image in Photos, Messages, or another supported app. Then, touch and hold the object or objects you want to cut out. You'll see a glowing line around the subject or subjects, but don't let go yet. Instead, drag the object or objects away from the original position until the cutout shrinks.

While holding the image cutout, use another finger to switch to another app and locate the spot where you want to place the image file. Finally, let go of the new image file to drop it where needed.

Open your image in Files or another supported app. In Files, head to the directory where the photo lives, but don't open the picture. Instead, long-press the file to open up its quick actions menu. In the menu, you should see an option for "Quick Actions" — tap that to see more options. Then, select "Remove Background."

As soon as you tap "Remove Background," the extracted subject from the image will save as a PNG file in the same directory.

Open your image in Safari or another supported app. In Safari, you can be on an article with multiple photos, on a search results page with numerous photographs, viewing a version of the picture on a website, viewing the actual image file, etc. — you can pretty much cut the subject out of a photo wherever the image appears.

Long-press the picture you want to extract an image from to open up its quick actions menu. In the menu, tap "Copy Subject" to copy the new PNG file for the isolated object to your clipboard. Then, go to whatever app you need and paste it where needed.

Don't Miss: 22 Exciting Changes Apple Has for Your Messages App in iOS 16 and iPadOS 16

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