How to Remove a Photo Background for Cricut
Remove the background before conversion
A trace tool converts everything it sees. Background clutter becomes stray cut paths.
Every successful photo-to-SVG conversion starts the same way: with a clean background removal. Skip this step and the trace tool will faithfully convert the couch, the carpet, and the curtains into paths alongside your subject.
Why Background Removal Comes First
A trace tool has no idea what you care about. It sees light and dark regions and converts all of them. If your pet is sitting on a patterned blanket, that pattern becomes dozens of extra shapes layered around and through your subject — impossible to separate afterward.
Removing the background first means the converter only ever sees the subject on empty transparency. Everything it produces is something you actually want to cut.
A true removed background is transparent, not painted white. A white rectangle behind your subject still traces as a shape. Make sure your exported file has a genuinely transparent background — a PNG, not a JPG.
How to Remove a Background Cleanly
- Start with a photo where the subject already contrasts with the background — clean removal depends on clear edges.
- Use a background-removal tool to isolate the subject. Many free and paid options exist.
- Zoom in and check the edges. Look for leftover background fringe or accidentally-removed parts of the subject.
- Export as a PNG with a transparent background, never a JPG (JPG cannot store transparency).
- Convert that clean PNG to SVG, or feed it into your photo-to-SVG tool.
One Step Instead of Two
Background removal and SVG conversion are two separate chores if you do them by hand. StickerReady combines them: upload the original photo, and it removes the background and produces the cuttable SVG in a single pass.
Skip the separate background-removal step
StickerReady removes the background and converts your photo to SVG in one upload.
Try StickerReady freeFrequently Asked Questions
Do I need to remove the background before converting to SVG?
Almost always, yes. Without it, the trace tool converts the background into stray paths mixed in with your subject. The only exception is a photo already shot against a plain, high-contrast backdrop.
Why does my subject have a white box around it?
The background was filled with white rather than made transparent, or the file was saved as a JPG which cannot store transparency. Re-export as a PNG with a genuinely transparent background.