Previewing and controlling dithering in Photoshop images Most images viewed on the Web are created using 24-bit color displays (millions of colors mode), but many Web browsers are used on computers using only 8-bit color displays (256-color mode), so that Web images often contain colors not available to many Web browsers. Computers use a technique called dithering to simulate colors not available in the color display system. Dithering creates 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 does not appear in the color palette. When optimizing images, keep in mind that two kinds of dithering can occur: You can choose a dithering pattern to be applied to the image. Images and Page Design > Previewing and controlling dithering in Photoshop images Related subtopics: |