Imagemagick Crop command not giving perfect result

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醉梦人生
醉梦人生 2021-02-04 16:57

I am using Imagemagick for resizing and cropping image.

Test Image :

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2条回答
  •  小鲜肉
    小鲜肉 (楼主)
    2021-02-04 17:21

    (Answer is updated, providing an illustrated example for -liquid-rescale further below now)


    Your original image's dimensions are:

    489 x 640 pixels
    

    Your desired dimensions seem to be:

    290 x 310 pixels
    

    This cannot scale to these dimensions without either:

    1. cropping (do not keep all areas of the intial image)
    2. keeping desired width (give up desired height)
    3. keeping desired height (give up desired width)
    4. distortion (do not keep the aspect ratio when scaling)
    5. padding (add more pixels to one or more edges)
    6. removing pixels where it's not obvious ("liquid rescale" or "seam carving" -- see Wikipedia)

    Your result shows '1.' (cropping), which you don't like. So you have options '2.' (keeping width), '3.' (keeping height), '4.' (distortion), '5.' (padding) and '6.' (seam carving) left to test.

    '2.': Keeping desired Height

    convert WPTgp.jpg -resize x310 keep-height.jpg
    

    Resulting Image has dimensions of 237 x 310 pixels.
    Keep Height.... Keep Height
    (determine width automatically)

    '3.': Keeping desired Width

    convert WPTgp.jpg -resize 290x keep-width.jpg
    

    Resulting Image has dimensions of 290 x 380 pixels.
    Keep Width..... Keep Width
    (determine height automatically)

    '4.': Distortion

    convert WPTgp.jpg -resize 290x310\! distorted.jpg
    

    Resulting Image has dimensions of 290 x 310 pixels.
    Distorted...... Distorted
    (ignore aspect ratio -- distort image if required to fit dimensions)

    '5.': Padding

    convert WPTgp.jpg \
       -resize 290x310 \
       -gravity center \
       -background orange \
       -extent 290x310 \
        padded.jpg
    

    Resulting Image has dimensions of 290 x 310 pixels. (Orange background was added only to demonstrate that the 'extention' of the image did work.)
    Padded......... Padded
    (keep aspect ratio -- extend image for desired dimensions)

    '6.': Seam Carving

    convert WPTgp.jpg -liquid-rescale 290x310\! liquid.jpg
    

    The above would be the command you'd spontaneously derive from quick-reading the ImageMagick command options reference. However, it doesn't work well, and instead I used:

    convert WPTgp.jpg -liquid-rescale 599x640\! -scale 290x310 liquid.jpg
    convert WPTgp.jpg -liquid-rescale 599x640\! -scale 48.4%   liquid.jpg
    

    Further below is an explanation why I needed to modify it....
    Liquid-rescaled 'Liquidly' rescaled
    Sorry -- I cannot provide example picture right now; this requires the additional ImageMagick delegate liblqr (liquid rescaling library) to be installed, which I don't have at this moment) I've now had the opportunity to create a 'liquidly rescaled' version of the original image.


    Caveats about Seam Carving / '-liquid-rescale':

    As stated above, the last image is not the result of my originally proposed command, but of one of these two modified versions:

    convert WPTgp.jpg -liquid-rescale 599x640\! -scale 290x310 liquid.jpg
    convert WPTgp.jpg -liquid-rescale 599x640\! -scale 48.4%   liquid.jpg
    

    Remember, we have an original image of 489x610 pixels, which we are expected to scale to 290x310 pixels. But -liquid-rescale isn't good at rescaling in two dimensions at once -- it's designed to scale into one direction only (horizontal or vertical). If you try to do both at once, results may not be what you'd expect. Here is the result for the originally proposed command:

     convert WPTgp.jpg -liquid-rescale 290x310\! liquid.jpg
    

    LQR gone wrong liquid-rescale gone wrong

    That's why I came up with the two modified commands which work in two steps:

    1. First, apply liquid rescaling to the horizontal dimension only, expanding the original's width from 489 pixels to 599 pixels.
    2. Second, apply 'normal' aspect-ratio-keeping scaling to the intermediate result to produce the final image.

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