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For those not in the loop, many flagship phones and some high-end desktop monitors have these things called âAMOLEDâ displays, that let them actually turn off individual pixels completely. If your home screen (for instance) is mostly true blackâexactly #000000âthen those pixels will be actually turned off and save a not-insignificant amount of energy, and can significantly extend battery life since the display is usually the biggest battery killer. As such, I try to set all my apps (not that I use many) to the darkest theme they have, and only use â„70% true black wallpapers.
The above subreddit has a pretty good tutorial on editing your own AMOLED background:
But unfortunately itâs only helpful for a very small number of images that can be adequately edited solely using curves and color adjustment. I wrote this tutorial for a âstep upâ from that: it still needs a specific type of image, but it doesnât need to be a /perfect/ image, as long as you can mask out the light parts then youâre golden.
[1.0mib] The before and after of what weâre making
Source image used throughout this post, used with permission.
Fair warning, I wrote this post around eight months ago when I first posted the final edited wallpaperá” and I forgot to post it until now.
[a]: the final wallpaper if thatâs all you want
[1.7mib] The raw starting image, cropped to the resolution you want (in this case, 1800x2400)
Generally, your image should roughly follow the requirements in "AMOLED in 30 Seconds", but there can be areas of the background that are bright and not suitable for that tutorial. The main thing is that the majority of the background should be darker than the foreground. For this source image, the background in the top 75% is fine, but the white perch means it doesnât work well just adjusting the curves.
Once youâve chosen your image drag-ânâ-drop it into GIMP and crop it to the size you want.
Create a layer mask (Right click on the layer, click on Add Layer Mask) and give the subject a *very* rough outline with a large brush. Make sure you have the layer mask and not the layer itself selected, and make sure your brush color is 100% black. I primarily do this so I donât get distracted by the background when adjusting the curves, and to save me some work filling in the rest of the mask later.
Click back to the image from the layer mask, then to to ColorsâCurves. You probably want to move the shadows point (the bottom left dot) to the right, and the highlights point (the top right dot) down. You can add some nodes in the middle, and just play around with it until it looks good. This part of the edit is basically the AMOLED in 30 Seconds tutorial, so you can go follow that.
[70.0kib] an example of what the curves could look like
[1.4mib] Before and after curves adjustment
Use a relatively large Hardness 75 brush, and outline all the way around the subject. When outlining, keep the edge of the circle right on the edge of the subject, like is shown in the following picture. This is still a rough outline, so donât worry about areas of detail or tight corners yet. What youâre hoping for is that most of the outline is adequately masked with this, so all youâll have to focus on is those areas of detail.
[64.0kib] A sample brush configuration for this part
[519.4kib] An example of how you should hold the brush when outlining this part
This takes a lot of work to do, so only do it on detailed areas of the subject that show background through them, like tufts of fur or feathers. If you can, skip it. You want a 100 Hardness brush at size 1.
[62.0kib] A sample brush configuration for this part
Start outlining the area that youâre detailing, donât worry about filling in anything yet.
[327.9kib] Starting the outline
[456.7kib] The full outline I did (it extends up into the black part near the top too)
Right click on the layer mask in the sidebar and select "Show Layer Mask." This should show the mask itself, like below.
[275.2kib] the detailed mask outline
Leaving your Hardness 100 brush, make it a little bigger and start filling in the outline you made before
[274.9kib] Starting to fill in the outline
[271.5kib] Continuing to fill inâŠ
[274.2kib] The fully filled-in mask
Right-clicking on the mask again and unchecking "Show Layer mask" and⊠it doesnât look great. Thereâs usually going to be some spots that donât work out. Sometimes you can take a 50% or 25% opacity brush and try to soften the edges of your mask, but sometimes, like I did here, you just have to mask it out. I decided to mask out the talon completely.
[456.7kib] the bad-looking talon mask
Now you can export your image (as a PNG, JPG will ruin the true black areas). A reminder to check your image on your real AMOLED screen or a TrueColor monitor before posting it anywhere. In this image, there were a few spots of detail that had a dark background behind them that I tried to cheat on, but after looking at it on my phone it looked bright green behind it, so I had to go back and mask it out.
And there! You should now have a beautiful, battery-saving wallpaper for whatever device you want to use it on!
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