Image editing encompasses the processes of alteringimages, whether they aredigital photographs, traditionalphoto-chemical photographs, orillustrations. Traditional analog image editing is known asphoto retouching, using tools such as anairbrush to modify photographs or edit illustrations with any traditionalart medium.Graphic software programs, which can be broadly grouped intovector graphics editors,raster graphics editors, and3D modelers, are the primary tools with which a user may manipulate, enhance, and transform images. Many image editing programs are also used torender or createcomputer art from scratch. The term "image editing" usually refers only to the editing of 2D images, not 3D ones.
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Raster images are stored on a computer in the form of a grid of picture elements, orpixels. These pixels contain the image's color and brightness information. Image editors can change the pixels to enhance the image in many ways. The pixels can be changed as a group or individually by the sophisticatedalgorithms within the image editors. This article mostly refers tobitmap graphics editors, which are often used to alter photographs and other raster graphics. However,vector graphics software, such asAdobe Illustrator,CorelDRAW,Xara Designer Pro orInkscape, is used to create and modify vector images, which are stored as descriptions oflines,Bézier curves, andtext instead of pixels. It is easier torasterize a vector image than tovectorize a raster image; how to go about vectorizing a raster image is the focus of much research in the field ofcomputer vision. Vector images can be modified more easily because they contain descriptions of the shapes for easy rearrangement. They are also scalable, being rasterizable at anyresolution.
Camera or computer image editing programs often offer basic automatic image enhancement features that correct colorhue and brightness imbalances as well as other image editing features, such asred eye removal,sharpness adjustments,zoom features and automaticcropping. These are called automatic because generally they happen without user interaction or are offered with one click of a button or mouse button or by selecting an option from a menu. Additionally, some automatic editing features offer a combination of editing actions with little or no user interaction.[1]
Software apps offering automatic enhancement of images or photos includeAdobe,Fotor,Picsart,Radiant Photo,Skylum andImagen.
Listed below are some of the most used capabilities of the better graphics manipulation programs. The list is by no means all-inclusive. There are a myriad of choices associated with the application of most of these features.
One of the prerequisites for many of the applications mentioned below is a method ofselecting part(s) of an image, thus applying a change selectively without affecting the entire picture. Most graphics programs have several means of accomplishing this, such as:
as well as more advanced facilities such asedge detection,masking,alpha compositing, and color and channel-based extraction. The border of a selected area in an image is often animated with themarching ants effect to help the user to distinguish the selection border from the image background.
Another feature common to many graphics applications is that ofLayers, which are analogous to sheets of transparentacetate (each containing separate elements that make up a combined picture), stacked on top of each other, each capable of being individually positioned, altered, andblended with the layers below, without affecting any of the elements on the other layers. This is a fundamental workflow that has become the norm for the majority of programs on the market today, and enables maximum flexibility for the user while maintainingnon-destructive editing principles and ease of use.
Image editors can resize images in a process often calledimage scaling, making them larger, or smaller. Highimage resolution cameras can produce large images, which are often reduced in size forInternet use. Image editor programs use a mathematical process calledresampling to calculate new pixel values whose spacing is larger or smaller than the original pixel values. Images for Internet use are kept small, say 640 x 480 pixels, which would equal 0.3megapixels.
Digital editors are used tocrop images. Cropping creates a new image by selecting a desired rectangular portion from the image being cropped. The unwanted part of the image is discarded. Image cropping does not reduce the resolution of the area cropped. Best results are obtained when the original image has a high resolution. A primary reason for cropping is to improve the image composition in the new image.
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Using a selection tool, the outline of the figure or element in the picture is traced/selected, and then the background is removed. Depending on how intricate the "edge" is this may be more or less difficult to do cleanly. For example, individual hairs can require a lot of work. Hence the use of the "green screen" technique (chroma key) which allows one to easily remove the background.
Most image editors can be used to remove unwanted branches, etc., using a "clone" tool. Removing these distracting elements draws focus to the subject, improving overallcomposition.
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It is possible, using the software, to change thecolor depth of images. Common color depths are 2, 4, 16, 256, 65,536 and 16.7 million colors. The JPEG and PNG image formats are capable of storing 16.7 million colors (equal to 256 luminance values per color channel). In addition,grayscale images of 8bits or less can be created, usually via conversion anddown-sampling from a full-color image.Grayscale conversion is useful for reducing the file size dramatically when the original photographic print was monochrome, but a color tint has been introduced due to aging effects.
Image editors have provisions to simultaneously change thecontrast of images and brighten or darken the image.Underexposed images can often be improved by using this feature. Recent advances have allowed more intelligent exposure correction whereby only pixels below a particularluminosity threshold are brightened, thereby brightening underexposed shadows without affecting the rest of the image.The exact transformation that is applied to each color channel can vary from editor to editor.GIMP applies the following formula:[7]
if(brightness<0.0)value=value*(1.0+brightness);elsevalue=value+((1-value)*brightness);value=(value-0.5)*(tan((contrast+1)*PI/4))+0.5;
wherevalue is the input color value in the 0..1 range andbrightness andcontrast are in the −1..1 range.
In addition to the capability of changing the images' brightness and/or contrast in a non-linear fashion, most current image editors provide an opportunity to manipulate the images'gamma value.
Gamma correction is particularly useful for bringing details that would be hard to see on most computer monitors out of shadows. In some image editing software, this is called "curves", usually, a tool found in the color menu, and no reference to "gamma" is used anywhere in the program or the program documentation. Strictly speaking, the curves tool usually does more than simple gamma correction, since one can construct complex curves with multipleinflection points, but when no dedicated gamma correction tool is provided, it can achieve the same effect.
The color of images can be altered in a variety of ways. Colors can be faded in and out, and tones can be changed usingcurves or other tools. The color balance can be improved, which is important if the picture was shot indoors with daylight film, or shot on a camera with thewhite balance incorrectly set. Special effects, likesepia tone and grayscale, can be added to an image. In addition, more complicated procedures, such as the mixing of color channels, are possible using more advanced graphics editors.
Thered-eye effect, which occurs when flash photos are taken when the pupil is too widely open (so that light from the flash that passes into the eye through the pupil reflects off the fundus at the back of the eyeball), can also be eliminated at this stage.
Advanced Dynamic Blending is a concept introduced by photographerElia Locardi in his blogBlame The Monkey to describe the photographic process of capturing multiple bracketed exposures of a land or cityscape over a specific span of time in a changing natural or artificial lighting environment. Once captured, the exposure brackets are manually blended together into a single High Dynamic Range image using post-processing software.Dynamic Blending images serve to display a consolidated moment. This means that while the final image may be a blend of a span of time, it visually appears to represent a single instant.[8][9][10]
Image editors have provisions to create animage histogram of the image being edited. The histogram plots the number of pixels in the image (vertical axis) with a particular brightness value (horizontal axis). Algorithms in the digital editor allow the user to visually adjust the brightness value of each pixel and to dynamically display the results as adjustments are made. Improvements in picture brightness and contrast can thus be obtained.[11]
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Image editors may feature a number of algorithms which can add or removenoise in an image. SomeJPEG artifacts can be removed; dust and scratches can be removed and an image can be de-speckled. Noise reduction merely estimates the state of the scene without the noise and is not a substitute for obtaining a "cleaner" image. Excessive noise reduction leads to a loss of detail, and its application is hence subject to a trade-off between the undesirability of the noise itself and that of the reduction artifacts.
Noise tends to invade images when pictures are taken in low light settings. A new picture can be given an 'antiqued' effect by adding uniform monochrome noise.
Some image editors have color swapping abilities to selectively change the color of specific items in an image, given that the selected items are within a specific color range.
Image editors are capable of altering an image to be rotated in any direction and to any degree.Mirror images can be created and images can be horizontallyflipped or verticallyflopped. A small rotation of severaldegrees is often enough to level thehorizon, correctverticality (of a building, for example), or both. Rotated images usually requirecropping afterwards, in order to remove the resulting gaps at the image edges.
Some image editors allow the user todistort (or "transform") the shape of an image. While this might also be useful for special effects, it is the preferred method of correcting the typicalperspective distortion that results from photographs being taken at anoblique angle to arectilinear subject. Care is needed while performing this task, as the image is reprocessed usinginterpolation of adjacent pixels, which may reduce overall imagedefinition. The effect mimics the use of aperspective control lens, which achieves a similar correctionin-camera without loss of definition.
Photo manipulation packages have functions to correct images for various lensdistortions, including pincushion,fisheye, and barrel distortions. The corrections are in most cases subtle, but can improve the appearance of some photographs.
Incomputer graphics, the enhancement of an image is the process of improving the quality of a digitally stored image by manipulating the image with software. It is quite easy, for example, to make an image lighter or darker, or to increase or decrease contrast. Advanced photo enhancement software also supports many filters for altering images in various ways.[12] Programs specialized for image enhancement are sometimes called image editors.
Graphics programs can be used to both sharpen and blur images in a number of ways, such asunsharp masking ordeconvolution.[13] Portraits often appear more pleasing when selectively softened (particularly the skin and the background) to better make the subject stand out.[citation needed] This can be achieved with a camera by using a largeaperture, or in the image editor by making a selection and then blurring it.Edge enhancement is an extremely common technique used to make images appear sharper, although purists frown on the result as appearing unnatural.
Another form of image sharpening involves a form of contrast. This is done by finding the average color of the pixels around each pixel in a specified radius, and then contrasting that pixel from that average color. This effect makes the image seem clearer, seemingly adding details. An example of this effect can be seen to the right. It is widely used in the printing and photographic industries for increasing the local contrasts and sharpening the images.
Many graphics applications are capable of merging one or more individual images into a single file. The orientation and placement of each image can be controlled.
When selecting a raster image that is not rectangular, it requires separating the edges from the background, also known as silhouetting. This is the digital-analog of cutting out the image from a physical picture.Clipping paths may be used to add silhouetted images to vector graphics or page layout files that retain vector data.Alpha compositing, allows for softtranslucent edges when selecting images. There are a number of ways to silhouette an image with soft edges, including selecting the image or its background by sampling similar colors, selecting the edges by raster tracing, or converting a clipping path to a raster selection. Once the image is selected, it may be copied and pasted into another section of the same file, or into a separate file. The selection may also be saved in what is known as analpha channel.
A popular way to create a composite image is to use transparentlayers. The background image is used as the bottom layer, and the image with parts to be added are placed in a layer above that. Using an imagelayer mask, all but the parts to be merged is hidden from the layer, giving the impression that these parts have been added to the background layer. Performing a merge in this manner preserves all of thepixel data on both layers to more easily enable future changes in the new merged image.
A more recent tool in digital image editing software is the image slicer. Parts of images for graphical user interfaces or web pages are easily sliced, labeled and saved separately from whole images so the parts can be handled individually by the display medium. This is useful to allow dynamic swapping via interactivity or animating parts of an image in the final presentation.
Image editors usually have a list of special effects that can create unusual results. Images may be skewed and distorted in various ways. Scores of special effects can be applied to an image which include various forms of distortion, artistic effects, geometric transforms and texture effects,[14] or combinations thereof.
Using custom Curves settings[15] in Image editors such asPhotoshop, one can mimic the "pseudo-solarisation" effect, better known in photographic circles as theSabattier-effect.
The Clone Stamp tool selects and samples an area of your picture and then uses these pixels to paint over any marks. The Clone Stamp tool acts like a brush so you can change the size, allowing cloning from just one pixel wide to hundreds. You can change the opacity to produce a subtle clone effect. Also, there is a choice between Clone align or Clone non-align the sample area. In Photoshop this tool is called Clone Stamp, but it may also be called a Rubber Stamp tool.
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Controlling the print size and quality of digital images requires an understanding of thepixels-per-inch (ppi) variable that is stored in the image file and sometimes used to control the size of the printed image. WithinAdobe Photoshop's Image Size dialog, the image editor allows the user to manipulate both pixel dimensions and the size of the image on the printed document. These parameters work together to produce a printed image of the desired size and quality. Pixels per inch of the image, pixel per inch of the computer monitor, and dots per inch on the printed document are related, but in use are very different. The Image Size dialog can be used as an image calculator of sorts. For example, a 1600 × 1200 image with a resolution of 200 ppi will produce a printed image of 8 × 6 inches. The same image with 400 ppi will produce a printed image of 4 × 3 inches. Change the resolution to 800 ppi, and the same image now prints out at 2 × 1.5 inches. All three printed images contain the same data (1600 × 1200 pixels), but the pixels are closer together on the smaller prints, so the smaller images will potentially look sharp when the larger ones do not. The quality of the image will also depend on the capability of the printer.
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