I’ve found if you tick “Use 0 for transparency when needed” in the 
transformation settings, before you georeference, the bands you mention will 
automatically be transparent.
This only seems to be necessary if you start with a jpeg.
If you start with a tif or png format image, that supports transparency, the 
resulting image has transparent borders regardless of the setting.
This is probably the same as Nicolas’ method, just that qgis does it for you.  
Nicolas’ method is more useful if you already did the georeferencing and have 
not saved GCPs to do it again.

For clipping – look in the raster menu – Extraction, there are two options, 
clip to extent or clip to mask layer.

Another useful trick with scanned maps is, if you have scanned a line drawing 
type map that is predominantly white, try setting rendering mode to multiply – 
this makes white areas completely transparent so allows you to overlay the 
scanned map over other data, photos etc. very easily.


From: Qgis-user <qgis-user-boun...@lists.osgeo.org> On Behalf Of Firstname 
Lastname
Sent: Friday, 3 September 2021 1:39 AM
To: qgis-user@lists.osgeo.org
Subject: [Qgis-user] georeferencing

i have successfully georreferenced several maps in QGIS.  The georeferencing 
tool leaves a black band around the rotated and shifted image.  is there any 
way to get rid of this.  also, i would like to clip some  of these images to 
get rid of the margin material.  is there a way to do this in QGIS?
--
Byron Veilleux, MSc. P.Geo
Conjugate Geologic Services Limited

_______________________________________________
Qgis-user mailing list
Qgis-user@lists.osgeo.org
List info: https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user
Unsubscribe: https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user

Reply via email to