How to Add a Layer Mask in GIMP
Removing a background in GIMP 2.10 is straightforward once you understand layer masks. A mask hides pixels instead of deleting them, so mistakes are reversible and edges stay editable, which is essential for product photography where edge quality matters.
Open your image in GIMP (File > Open). If the layer is locked, right-click it in the Layers panel and select Layer > Transparency > Add Alpha Channel. Without an alpha channel, GIMP cannot produce transparency.
Add a layer mask: right-click the layer, choose Add Layer Mask, and select White (full opacity). The mask appears as a black-and-white thumbnail next to your image. White areas are visible; black areas become transparent.
How to Select the Background with Fuzzy Select
The Fuzzy Select tool (shortcut U) works like a magic wand: click on the background and GIMP selects all connected pixels of a similar color. This is the fastest method for product photos shot against a plain wall or seamless backdrop.
Click the Fuzzy Select tool in the toolbox (or press U), then click on the background area. Hold Shift and click again to add more regions to the selection. Adjust the Threshold slider in the tool options (default 15) to control how many similar tones are included.
For furniture against a plain wall, one or two clicks usually selects the entire background. For busy scenes with multiple colors, switch to the Free Select tool (F) and trace around the object manually.
How to Feather Edges and Export as Transparent PNG
A hard selection edge looks unnatural. Feathering softens the boundary so the cut-out blends seamlessly onto any new background.
With the background selected, go to Select > Feather and enter 1 to 2 pixels. For large images (2000px or more), use 2 to 3 pixels; for small web images, 1 pixel is enough.
Switch to the Bucket Fill tool (Shift+B), set the color to black, and make sure you are painting on the mask thumbnail in the Layers panel. Fill the selected area. The background disappears, leaving your product on a transparent canvas.
To verify transparency, toggle the layer visibility off and on. You should see the checkerboard pattern behind your product.
Export the file: File > Export As, and name it with a .png extension. PNG preserves the alpha channel (transparency). Do not export as JPG, because JPEG does not support transparency and will fill the background with solid white or black.
How to Remove a White Background in GIMP
White backgrounds are the most common scenario for e-commerce product photos. Amazon, Shopify, and eBay all require white-background listings, which means sellers frequently need to remove a white background to reuse the product image elsewhere.
In GIMP, white backgrounds are the easiest to remove because they have maximum contrast against most products. Use the Fuzzy Select tool (U) with a high Threshold setting (30-50 instead of the default 15). Click once on the white area and GIMP will grab nearly all connected white pixels in a single click.
If a few stray white pixels remain inside the product (common with shadows or reflections), switch to Quick Mask mode (Shift+Q), paint over the missed areas with black, and switch back. This lets you fine-tune the selection before applying it to the layer mask.
Once the selection is clean, feather by 1 pixel, then fill the mask with black to erase the white background. Export as PNG. The result is a product on a transparent canvas, ready to be placed on any colored background or lifestyle scene.
Alternative Methods to Remove Background in GIMP
Fuzzy Select is not the only way. Here are two alternatives for difficult images:
The Foreground Select tool: brush over the foreground object, then brush over the background, and press Enter. GIMP calculates the boundary automatically. This method works better for hair, fur, and complex edges that Fuzzy Select struggles with.
The Paths tool (B): for pixel-perfect control, trace the object with Bezier curves, convert the path to a selection (Select > From Path), and apply it to the mask. This is the most accurate method but takes the longest.
GIMP vs AI Background Remover
GIMP is free and powerful, but the manual process takes 5 to 15 minutes per image and requires practice. Common pain points: Fuzzy Select frays on fabric and reflections, the Foreground Select tool can leave halos, and feathering has to be tuned per image.
An AI background remover like deervo handles all of these automatically: fabric, hair, reflections, and complex edges, all in about 3 seconds. Upload, click, and download a transparent PNG. No software to install, no mask to paint, no threshold to tune.
If you need to remove backgrounds from a batch of product photos, GIMP will take hours. The AI tool finishes the same batch in minutes. Try it free with no signup required.
