Resizing without blur - resize

I would like to know if there is a way to resize a picture while keeping it's pixelisation
convert ./TEST.png -resize 723x523 -compose Copy -gravity center -extent 723x523 -quality 92 ./TEST_big.png
Illustration from 20x20 to 100x100 here: image
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Thanks

No one has answered this so I will put what I've done.
I've actually made a Python script who, for each pixel is making a square of n-pixels (10 for example). I'm making the output larger than the picture size I actually want(because I'm only doing squares) with GDAL and then resize it with imageMagick.

Related

Converting a PDF to PNG with anti-aliasing and transparent background

I am trying to convert a LaTeX-generated PDF file to a PNG file with anti-aliasing and a transparent background (white text on a black background). After having read the answer to this post and one of the comments to the answer, I compared the convert function of ImageMagick against pdftoppm. So far, the highest quality anti-aliased images that I can generate are using pdftoppm (for a given DPI resolution). I use the following command:
pdftoppm -png -r 2000 text.pdf > text.png
The equivalent command (or so I think) using ImageMagick was:
convert +antialias -interpolate Nearest -density 2000 text.pdf -quality 90 -colorspace RGB text.png
However, I did not get as good-quality anti-aliasing using ImageMagick as I did with pdftoppm. In fact there hardly seems to be any anti-aliasing in the ImageMagick-generated image. See the close-ups below:
pdftoppm image:
ImageMagick image:
So where this leaves me is that I am satisfied with the anti-aliasing that pdftoppm provides. However, ImageMagick seems to have more functionality in now converting the anti-aliased image such that the black background is transparent. I have applied the approaches detailed in this post using ImageMagick, but they compromise the quality of the anti-aliasing that was previously satisfactory.
Can anyone advise me on how to solve the issue of obtaining a transparent background (which will always be black in color) while not affecting the anti-aliasing quality? Additionally, if the ImageMagick command that I used above was sub-optimal for generating a high-quality anti-aliased image, is there a way that I can achieve both anti-aliasing as well as background transparency by using ImageMagick alone? Any form of advice/tips would be much appreciated!
P.s. Since this question is partially LaTeX-related (I use LuaLaTeX to compile the PDF), I have posted a related question here regarding whether there is a much more straightforward way of directly generating the PDF file with a transparent background.
EDIT:
I've managed to fix the issue of transparency based on some comments on the question I posted on the TeX stack exchange. Now it's just about how I can improve the quality of anti-aliasing. Is there a way that I can achieve the same quality anti-aliasing that I get from pdftoppm?
The pdf file that I am converting can be found on this Dropbox link. Note that the font colour is white, and the background shows as white too (in my pdf viewer anyway), but is transparent. This is the converted PNG file.
You should use -density to increase the anti-aliasing of your PDF to PNG conversion. I note that your image is opaque white and the text is simply in the alpha channel.
convert -density 600 text.pdf -alpha extract x.png
If on Imagemagick 7, change convert to magick.
If you want to keep the transparency and keep your text white, then
convert -density 600 text.pdf y.png
The image is above, but will look completely white and blend with the white background. So you will need to download it.
If you want black text on transparency, then
convert -density 600 text.pdf -alpha extract -alpha copy -channel rgb -negate +channel z.png

How to cut the png image as per the shape?

I have no experience on any image processing/editing tool. And I am doing a project, which requires me to use different shapes. I could create different shapes using visio. But however not able to get rid of white background behind. I need only shape not squared white background.Tried online out of my ways but not successfull.
Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Ganesh
Absolutely any image file has to be contained within a rectangular frame, this includes png and SVG.
Some image file formats can have what are called alpha channel backgrounds this allows you to see through transparent areas.
What you want to do is remove the white background to expose the alpha channel background in Photoshop (or similar tool) which can then be saved out as transparent.
For example in Photoshop:
If you open this image directly and have no other layers, double click the layer that says background and OK the confirmation box. This turns your flat image into a layered image
Select the magic wand tool and ensure you have a high tolerance set (3)
with the wand selected click the white area to bring up a marquee around your selection (the white background) and hit delete to remove it.
Your image should now have a chequered background which is the transparency showing through.
If you now go to file > save as and select png, your image should now be saved out with an alpha background.
Please note: There are further optimisations to make if this is for web, including file formats and file size but that is beyond the scope of this question but I encourage you to read up on the Gif format and it's restrictions, the difference between 8bit and 24bit pngs and how to use SVG.
You can do it pretty simply at the command-line using ImageMagick which is free and installed on most Linux distros and is available for OSX and Windows.
Basically, you want to make your whites transparent, so you would do
convert shape.png -transparent white result.png
If your whites are a little bit off-white, you could allow for some variation with a little fuzz as follows:
convert shape.png -fuzz 10% -transparent white result.png
I added the checkerboard background just so you can see it on StackOverflow's white background - it is not really there.
By the way, you may like to trim to the smallest bounding rectangle while you are there:
convert shape.png -fuzz 10% -transparent white -trim result.png
By the way, you can also draw your shapes with ImageMagick:
convert -size 150x150 xc: -fill none -stroke "rgb(74,135,203)" -draw 'stroke-width 90 ellipse 0,0 80,80 30,80' arc.png
See Anthony Thyssen's excellent examples here.

Margins Disappear In PDF -> PNG Conversion with ImageMagick

I'm having troubles with converting PDF to PNG in ImageMagick. I've used different variations, including using Ghostscript and piping the output to ImageMagic (as given here - which doesn't seem to work for me, so I have to save to a temp file instead of using a pipe). I've found this is working best for me:
convert -background transparent -density 150x150 Test.pdf Test-IMSoloOut.png
Here's a screenshot of the original PDF in my viewer (Preview, on OS X):
And when I convert it, I get this:
The problem is it's dropping the margins. I'm not clear whether it's making them transparent or what, but the formatting of the image looks sloppy without the margins.
I was given this to try:
convert -density 150x150 Test.pdf -gravity center -background transparent -extent 612x792 Test-Extras.png
And that just gives me one section of the page:
I tried adapting that and changed the 612x792 to 1275x1650, which would fit 150DPI multiplied by the size of the page (8.5" x 11"). When I did that, I got a large image, but, again, the margins were gone, like in the 2nd image above.
These images will be displayed in a Java program that will be displaying a number of pages, so the margins could vary (in other words, I can't just wrap a set border around the output, as seen in the 2nd image, since the border size will change in some images).
I've seen a number of hits on removing margins for PDF to PNG conversion, but they don't seem to provide anything to help me.
My guess is that, in the conversion process, the margins are converted to something transparent, so I tried adding "-transparent white" to the command line for convert, but it didn't help.
What can I do to either get the margins back or, if they're there and not visible, how can I get them to display? Basically I want the PNG file (image #2) to look like the PDF file with margins included (image #1).
I suspect I'm missing something obvious - I hope it's that easy.
How can I make sure the space in the margins show up?
I never got an exact answer, but one of the ImageMagick people was quite helpful with this. Basically, I needed to use the option "-extent" to specify how big the image was. Since I was using a different density than the default, I had to take that into account, too. The command line that worked was:
convert -density 150x150 InputFile.pdf -background white -units PixelsPerInch -density 150 -extent 1275x1650 OutputFile.png
The 1275x1650 comes from multiplying 150 (for the DPI) by 8.5" for the width and by 11 for the height.

ImageMagick extend canvas with transparent background

convert input.png -extent 100x100 -gravity center -background white output.png
If the input is 50x50 the surrounding background is white. Can I somehow set this to transparent without declaring any color within input as transparent?
Use this instead:
convert \
input.png \
-background none \
-gravity center \
-extent 100x100 \
output.png
Note well: The order of the parameters is significant! (To convince yourself, just put -background none at the end of the parameters instead of the start...)
Updated: Thanks to #jesmith who noticed that the commandline I originally provided does no longer work as intended. More recent versions of convert additionally require that the -gravity center is called before -extent 100x100. (This was one of the changes introduced to one ImageMagick's most recent versions [at the time of originally writing this answer]).
Kurt's note is ironically spot on, order matters greatly. Kurt's command results in gravity not being applied to the extent, so the transparent 'border' will all be to the bottom and/or right of the image.
Moving gravity before extent will correctly create equal transparent 'borders' on all applicable sides.
convert input.jpg -background none -gravity Center -extent 100x50
output.png

CLI ImageMagick resize (downscale only)

I would like to resize (only if neccessary) an image to maximum resolution of 800x600. So let's say we have image of resolution 2000x1600 and it will resize to 750x600, but if I have an image of resolution 400x300 it will leave as it is. In other words I need ImageMagick to resize images without upscaling. How can I do this?
convert -resize 800x600 input output does downscale but also upscale.
Solved it: convert -resize 800x600\> input output will resize only if width is larger than 800px OR height is larger than 600px.
if you want to resize the current file try mogrify -resize 800x600\> *.jpg
this will resize all jpg images with more than 800 pixels width or 600 height.