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6734

answers:

7

I have python code that needs to do just a couple simple things to photographs: crop, resize, and overlay a watermark. I've used PIL, and the resample/resize results are TERRIBLE. I've used imagemagick, and the interface and commands were designed by packaging a cat in a box, and then repeatedly throwing it down a set of stairs at a keyboard.

I'm looking for something which is not PIL or Imagemagick that I can use with python to do simple, high-quality image transformations. For that matter, it doesn't even have to have python bindings if the command line interface is good.

Oh, and it needs to be relatively platform agnostic, our production servers are linux, but some of our devs develop on windows. It can't require the installation of a bunch of silly gui code to use as a library, either.

A: 

PIL can do good resizing. Make sure your source image is in RGB mode, not palette colors, and try the different algorithm choices.

Ned Batchelder
I've always used it on plain ol' JPEGs. Image.open('myfile.jpg'), then Image.thumbnail or Image.resize, followed by Image.save... All with the ANTIALIAS setting for downsampling. That should be in RGB mode by default (jpegs are RGB) and with the best algorithm for downsampling, right? If I'm missing something I would love to know what I've got wrong...
Gabriel Hurley
Without seeing the source code and the source images, it's hard to say what's going on. Lots of people use PIL for this kind of work and are happy with the results. Something is different about your case (do you have especially eagle eyes?), but we haven't figured out what yet.
Ned Batchelder
+1  A: 

While imagemagick seems to be the de facto open-source imaging library, possibly DevIL (cross platform, seems to do simple image operations) or FreeImage.

John Paulett
+10  A: 

I've used PIL, and the resample/resize results are TERRIBLE.

They shouldn't be, as long as you:

  1. use only Image.ANTIALIAS filtering for downscaling operations
  2. use only Image.BICUBIC filtering for upscaling operations.
  3. remember to convert to 'RGB' colour mode before the resize if you are using a paletted image
  4. don't use .thumbnail(). it's crap
  5. set the quality= level to something appropriate when saving JPEGs (the default is quite low)
bobince
You know, after some further testing, the results *are* better with resize as opposed to thumbnail, even with both using the Image.ANTIALIAS algorithm. If I think of it later I'll post some sample results of various operations.
Gabriel Hurley
See http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1386400/pil-image-resizing-algorithm-similar-to-firefoxs — it doesn't quite test like against like but there is clearly something quite wrong with what thumbnail() is doing.
bobince
+1  A: 

Have you checked pypi? A cursory search shows some image related tools there, I also discovered python-gd, no clue how useful it might be though.

I've never had any issues with PIL myself, but some kind of variety might be interesting.

tvon
+1  A: 

GIMP has a reasonable command-line interface, I think.

ilya n.
Unfortunately GIMP requires GTK+, which is a fairly silly library to have installed on a headless server.
Paul McMillan
+1  A: 

Take a look at some of these imaging libraries:

hxxp://pypi.python.org/pypi/collective.croppingimagefield/0.1beta

hxxp://pypi.python.org/pypi/cropresize/0.1.1

hxxp://pypi.python.org/pypi/image_resize/1.0

James
A: 

Last time I compared, this downscaler's output is almost identical to that of GIMP's "cubic" option:

 import Image

 def stretch(im, size, filter=Image.NEAREST):
     im.load()
     im = im._new(im.im.stretch(size, filter))
     return im

IIRC, the differences are visually indistinguishable -- some pixel values +/-1 due to rounding, and they tend to be round the edges. It's not slow either.

cf: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg00248.html

Douglas Bagnall