bulk scale

Brian Cluff brian at snaptek.com
Fri Jan 1 13:02:25 MST 2016


Use Hugin.  It's powerful and offers a a simple mode that just works as 
long as your input images are of good quality.

Brian Cluff

On 01/01/2016 12:46 PM, Michael Havens wrote:
> what is the best photo stitching program. My search revealed many and I
> was interested in stitchpanorama but I could not find instructions on
> how to install a plugin and I want to hear some opinions on good ones.
>
> I was hoping to find one that would stitch on both axis. (both x and y)
> The reason I want to be able to stitch both axes  is so I would be able
> to mimic a wide angle lens.
>
> Could I use convert for this purpose too?
>
>
> On Fri, Jan 1, 2016 at 2:35 PM, Michael Havens <bmike1 at gmail.com
> <mailto:bmike1 at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>     thanks *Brian*
>
>     On Fri, Jan 1, 2016 at 2:33 PM, Brian Cluff <brian at snaptek.com
>     <mailto:brian at snaptek.com>> wrote:
>
>         Take a look at the command "mogrify".  It's a command that comes
>         with imagmagic (convert) and generally takes the same options as
>         convert, but it made to do bulk converstion, so that you don't
>         need to have a for loop around your command.
>         Just be aware that it will usually replace your images with the
>         converted versions, so make sure you test things out on backups.
>
>         Brian Cluff
>
>         On 12/31/2015 02:34 PM, Matt Graham wrote:
>
>                 On Dec 31, 2015 1:57 PM, "Michael Havens"
>                 <bmike1 at gmail.com <mailto:bmike1 at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>                     Is there a way to scale a bunch of pictures down to
>                     the same size
>                     with GIMP?
>
>
>             Probably, but it'd be a lot more of a pain to do that than
>             to do what
>             sean suggested.
>
>             On 2015-12-31 14:07, sean wrote:
>
>                 Use ImageMagick instead - it's designed for this and is
>                 quite powerful.
>
>
>             To expand on what sean wrote:
>
>             for FILE in *.jpg ; do
>                  NEWFILE=`echo "$FILE" | sed -e 's/.jpg$/_resized.jpg/'`
>                  convert "$FILE" -resize 50% "$NEWFILE"
>                  done
>
>             ...will take all the .jpg files in the current dir and write
>             out new
>             files named (original filename)_resized.jpg which have their
>             X and Y
>             dimensions reduced by 50%.  The original files will still be
>             there.  The
>             geometry specification in ImageMagick is powerful, so it's more
>             complicated than you may expect.
>             http://www.imagemagick.org/script/command-line-processing.php#geometry
>             for all the things you can do with it.
>
>
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>
>
>     --
>     :-)~MIKE~(-:
>
>
>
>
> --
> :-)~MIKE~(-:
>
>
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