Imagemagick Colorspace Black/White to CMYK - imagemagick

I have to batch convert a whole directory from colorspace Black/White (shown in XNView) to CMYK for print..
I tried like this (worked well for "normal" graphics..)
mogrify.exe -path [...]\Logos -profile [...]\RGB\AdobeRGB1998.icc [...]\Logos\*
mogrify.exe -path [...]\Logos -profile [...]\CMYK\CoatedFOGRA39.icc [...]\Logos\*
[...] usually contains a specific path..
whats wrong here? After the procedure the files are much bigger 20kb compared to 400kb.. But they are still colorspace black/white...
Anyone an idea?

If the files are truly in the grayscale colorspace then they do not need to be converted to CMYK. CMYK files are larger than RGB files because there are four channels in CMYK and only three in RGB. You may also find that if you convert RGB blacks to CMYK blacks then you no longer have BLACK. You will get strange values such as C 78 M 84 Y 97 K 89.

Related

How to change the depth of an image using imagemagick?

I have tried adding the option -depth 12 to the string
convert transparentPNG.png -resize 500x400 -background white -flatten -depth 12 png_small.jpg
The input file is a transparent png to which I'm adding a background and then changing the depth. But the depth remains the same as 8bits. I verified the same using the -verbose.
I'm not sure what could I be doing wrong here. I'm referring to the site link
The transparent input png file used for my test can be found here
Let me know if you have any questions on the tests i did. Hoping to get some tips.
A JPG can only be 8-bit, so your internal 12-bit image is converted back to 8-bit when you save the result.

how to convert scanned jpg files to pbm format losslessly?

Using ImageMagick's convert utility to convert some scanned jpg files to pbm files.
However, even if the option -quality 100 is used, the pbm's resolution still looks worse than the original scanned jpg file.
Worse, the scanned jpg file is a colored one, while the converted pbm is black and white.
Info of original jpg:
image size: 2256 × 1568 pixels
dpi: 300 pixels/inch
color model: RGB
info of the converted pbm:
image size: 2256 × 1568 pixels
dpi: 72 pixels/inch
color model: Gray
Currently, here is what I did to convert the format:
qiang#bonjour:~/scan$ convert scan000.jpg scan000.pbm
Am I missing any option to use with convert? As I mentioned earlier, -quality 100 had been tried, but to no avail.
Using ImageMagick, I think you want to output to PPM not PBM. Try
convert image.jpg image.ppm
or try the ascii version by using
convert image.jpg -compress none image.ppm
PBM is binary (black/white) and PGM is grayscale. If you want to keep color, then you need to use PPM.
Unfortunately, I believe that ImageMagick can only read DJVU format images. So you cannot write to it directly from ImageMagick.

ImageMagick convert adds several extra "border" colors from tiff to jpeg?

I created an 8-bit .tiff image ("test.tiff") containing a grid of 30 different color patches in the RGB color space using ImageMagick -convert.
When I convert this image into a jpeg (which is what I need) using:
convert -quality 100 -colorspace RGB -depth 8 test.tiff test.jpg
The identify -verbose command reveals that the resulting jpeg has several additional colors in the color table, each only taking up a few (1-4) pixels and residing very near the desired colors in RGB space. My assumption is that some kind of border bleeding is happening; maybe due to compression?
I don't understand why this border bleeding has occurred, especially given that it does not occur when I convert the tiff image to either a bmp or pcx image.
Thank you
By definition, JPEG is a lossy compression. The effects your experiencing are expected with the JPEG format. Setting the -quality of 100 will not have a 1-to-1 image result as tiff.
See additional answers:
Should I use JPG or TIFF for high-quality prints?
[...] because every time [JPEG] would save it it would generate some changes.
Is Jpeg lossless when quality is set to 100?
At [quality] 100, you just get the LEAST loss possible.
I don't know how you created your 30 colour swatch, or how your histogram looks, but you might try adding -dither None and -colors 30 options to your convert commands:
convert test.tiff -dither None -colors 30 ...

imagemagick convert CMYK pdf to RGB jpeg or PNG and preseerve colors

I have a cmyk pdf that I am trying to convert to a RGB jpeg or png file but have the colors stay pretty close to what the CMYK version is (compared to how photoshop does it)
I am trying the following command but the colors change drastically from a red color to almost bright neon red and so on.
Here is the command
convert cmykpdf.pdf +profile icc -profile AdobeRGB1998.icc -colorspace sRGB jpegtesting.jpg
Any ideas? or thoughts on how to do this. I tried saving it as a PNG also and same issue occurs and have tried changing sRGB to just RGB
NOTE: It doesnt necessarily need to be RGB jpeg it can even be CMYK jpeg but i just need it to be displayed in the browser correctly and I know safari does not display cmyk jpegs correctly
My goal is to just display a img in the browser that shows the correct color and correct resolution nothing pixilated
The solution is fairly easy, there's nothing voodoo or special about Photoshop's CMYK to RGB nowadays. Imagemagick uses LCMS color engine, which does its job just fine.
But first you'll need to edit delegates.xml file inside IM's directory. Find the line with delegate decode="ps:cmyk" and insert -dUseCIEColor=false near the end, so it looks like that:
<delegate decode="ps:cmyk" restrain="True" command=""#PSDelegate#" -q -dQUIET -dSAFER -dBATCH -dNOPAUSE -dNOPROMPT -dMaxBitmap=500000000 -dEPSCrop -dAlignToPixels=0 -dGridFitTT=2 "-sDEVICE=pamcmyk32" -dTextAlphaBits=%u -dGraphicsAlphaBits=%u "-r%s" %s "-sOutputFile=%s" -dUseCIEColor=false "-f%s" "-f%s""/>
It's necessary because otherwise Ghostscript (before returning pam image to ImageMagick) will perform CMYK to CMYK convertion (assuming DeviceCMYK to be CIEbased CMYK), and you probably don't want that, as colors will shift considerably.
Then try this command:
convert -density 144 cmyk.pdf -profile USWebCoatedSWOP.icc -resample 72 -profile "sRGB Color Space Profile.icm" -quality 100 out.jpg
Here we take cmyk.pdf (rather, temporary pam image that GS returns to IM), assign CMYK profile (just as you do in Photoshop, when you open a file or do it explicitly - therefore choose profile that describes you input CMYK best), convert it to sRGB profile (because I don't think you want AdobeRGB as color space of images for Internet) and save to jpeg. Reduce quality parameter as needed.
One more trick here is additional manual anti-aliasing -- note intermediate resolution of 144 dpi and final 72 dpi. Because I don't think that Ghostscript's anti-aliasing with -dGraphicsAlphaBits=4 is en par with Photoshop's anti-aliasing.
The result of this command looks exactly the same as converted in Photoshop.
You could try this:
convert -negate -colorspace RGB srcfile.jpg outputfile.jpg
Let me know if it works!
Based on previous answers, I finally managed to keep natural colors from a CMYK pdf to a RGB png simply using:
convert -colorspace sRGB cmyk.pdf rbg.png

ImageMagick: convert keeps changing the colorspace to Gray. How to preserve sRGB colorspace?

I have a batch script that converts my PNG-24 (with Transparency) images to 50% and 25% size (for mobile development). Usually these images have colors in them but now I am trying to convert an image that has no colors and ImageMagick keeps changing the colorspace profile to "Gray", which messes up my image in the 3d engine I'm using (Unity).
I have tried forcing it to use type TrueColor, colorspace sRGB, and the sRGB.icc profile (the one included with OSX) but it doesn't seem to care. It still changes it to Gray.
> convert old.png -profile srgb.icc -colorspace sRGB -type TrueColor new.png
> identify *.png
old.png PNG 140x140 140x140+0+0 8-bit sRGB 3.68KB 0.000u 0:00.000
new.png PNG 140x140 140x140+0+0 8-bit sRGB 256c 2.33KB 0.000u 0:00.000
ImageMagick still identifies it as an 8-bit sRGB image but it puts "256c" after it which I'm assuming means it has reduced it down to 256 colors, which I don't want either. When I look at the image in OSX Preview.app, it says it is using the Gray color profile. The image also visually looks a lot different.
Here is the image I'm using: https://dl.dropbox.com/u/59304/old.png
There is a duplicate question here, ImageMagick Reduces Colorspace to Gray, but the answer does not work for me and I don't have enough reputation to comment on his answer, unfortunately. I imagine my case is different because I'm using PNG and not JPG.
Version: ImageMagick 6.8.0-7 2013-01-02 Q16 http://www.imagemagick.org
Features: OpenCL
edit- After reading the ImageMagick forums as specified in one of the answers, it looks like just prepending PNG32: or PNG24: to the output file solves the problem.
The proper way to keep a grayscale PNG as RGB is to use PNG24:result.png
Input:
convert lena.png -colorspace gray PNG24:lenag_rgb.png
identify -verbose lenag_rgb.png
Image: lenag_rgb.png
Format: PNG (Portable Network Graphics)
Mime type: image/png
Class: DirectClass
Geometry: 256x256+0+0
Units: Undefined
Colorspace: sRGB
Type: Grayscale
So as you see above, Colorspace is RGB while the type is Grayscale.
For other image formats such as JPG and TIFF, use -define colorspace:auto-grayscale=false along with -type truecolor.
You may pass -set colorspace:auto-grayscale off to convert to disable automatic conversion of RGB channels to a single grayscale channel.
This solution was not yet available at the time of your question, but was introduced in 2015 with version 6.9.2:
2015-07-25 6.9.2-0 Dirk Lemstra <dirk#lem.....org>
Added -set colorspace:auto-grayscale=false that will prevent automatic conversion to grayscale inside coders that support grayscale.

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