I'm using PIL to convert a transparent PNG image uploaded with Django to a JPG file. The output looks broken.
Source file
https://i.stack.imgur.com/I2uNe.png
Code
Image.open(object.logo.path).save('/tmp/output.jpg', 'JPEG')
or
Image.open(object.logo.path).convert('RGB').save('/tmp/output.png')
Result
Both ways, the resulting image looks like this:
https://i.stack.imgur.com/rmlPz.png
Is there a way to fix this? I'd like to have white background where the transparent background used to be.
Solution
Thanks to the great answers, I've come up with the following function collection:
import Image
import numpy as np
def alpha_to_color(image, color=(255, 255, 255)):
"""Set all fully transparent pixels of an RGBA image to the specified color.
This is a very simple solution that might leave over some ugly edges, due
to semi-transparent areas. You should use alpha_composite_with color instead.
Source: http://stackoverflow.com/a/9166671/284318
Keyword Arguments:
image -- PIL RGBA Image object
color -- Tuple r, g, b (default 255, 255, 255)
"""
x = np.array(image)
r, g, b, a = np.rollaxis(x, axis=-1)
r[a == 0] = color[0]
g[a == 0] = color[1]
b[a == 0] = color[2]
x = np.dstack([r, g, b, a])
return Image.fromarray(x, 'RGBA')
def alpha_composite(front, back):
"""Alpha composite two RGBA images.
Source: http://stackoverflow.com/a/9166671/284318
Keyword Arguments:
front -- PIL RGBA Image object
back -- PIL RGBA Image object
"""
front = np.asarray(front)
back = np.asarray(back)
result = np.empty(front.shape, dtype='float')
alpha = np.index_exp[:, :, 3:]
rgb = np.index_exp[:, :, :3]
falpha = front[alpha] / 255.0
balpha = back[alpha] / 255.0
result[alpha] = falpha + balpha * (1 - falpha)
old_setting = np.seterr(invalid='ignore')
result[rgb] = (front[rgb] * falpha + back[rgb] * balpha * (1 - falpha)) / result[alpha]
np.seterr(**old_setting)
result[alpha] *= 255
np.clip(result, 0, 255)
# astype('uint8') maps np.nan and np.inf to 0
result = result.astype('uint8')
result = Image.fromarray(result, 'RGBA')
return result
def alpha_composite_with_color(image, color=(255, 255, 255)):
"""Alpha composite an RGBA image with a single color image of the
specified color and the same size as the original image.
Keyword Arguments:
image -- PIL RGBA Image object
color -- Tuple r, g, b (default 255, 255, 255)
"""
back = Image.new('RGBA', size=image.size, color=color + (255,))
return alpha_composite(image, back)
def pure_pil_alpha_to_color_v1(image, color=(255, 255, 255)):
"""Alpha composite an RGBA Image with a specified color.
NOTE: This version is much slower than the
alpha_composite_with_color solution. Use it only if
numpy is not available.
Source: http://stackoverflow.com/a/9168169/284318
Keyword Arguments:
image -- PIL RGBA Image object
color -- Tuple r, g, b (default 255, 255, 255)
"""
def blend_value(back, front, a):
return (front * a + back * (255 - a)) / 255
def blend_rgba(back, front):
result = [blend_value(back[i], front[i], front[3]) for i in (0, 1, 2)]
return tuple(result + [255])
im = image.copy() # don't edit the reference directly
p = im.load() # load pixel array
for y in range(im.size[1]):
for x in range(im.size[0]):
p[x, y] = blend_rgba(color + (255,), p[x, y])
return im
def pure_pil_alpha_to_color_v2(image, color=(255, 255, 255)):
"""Alpha composite an RGBA Image with a specified color.
Simpler, faster version than the solutions above.
Source: http://stackoverflow.com/a/9459208/284318
Keyword Arguments:
image -- PIL RGBA Image object
color -- Tuple r, g, b (default 255, 255, 255)
"""
image.load() # needed for split()
background = Image.new('RGB', image.size, color)
background.paste(image, mask=image.split()[3]) # 3 is the alpha channel
return background
Performance
The simple non-compositing alpha_to_color
function is the fastest solution, but leaves behind ugly borders because it does not handle semi transparent areas.
Both the pure PIL and the numpy compositing solutions give great results, but alpha_composite_with_color
is much faster (8.93 msec) than pure_pil_alpha_to_color
(79.6 msec). If numpy is available on your system, that's the way to go. (Update: The new pure PIL version is the fastest of all mentioned solutions.)
$ python -m timeit "import Image; from apps.front import utils; i = Image.open(u'logo.png'); i2 = utils.alpha_to_color(i)"
10 loops, best of 3: 4.67 msec per loop
$ python -m timeit "import Image; from apps.front import utils; i = Image.open(u'logo.png'); i2 = utils.alpha_composite_with_color(i)"
10 loops, best of 3: 8.93 msec per loop
$ python -m timeit "import Image; from apps.front import utils; i = Image.open(u'logo.png'); i2 = utils.pure_pil_alpha_to_color(i)"
10 loops, best of 3: 79.6 msec per loop
$ python -m timeit "import Image; from apps.front import utils; i = Image.open(u'logo.png'); i2 = utils.pure_pil_alpha_to_color_v2(i)"
10 loops, best of 3: 1.1 msec per loop
im = image.copy()
can be removed from pure_pil_alpha_to_color_v2
without changing the result. (After changing subsequent instances of im
to image
, of course.)
Here's a version that's much simpler - not sure how performant it is. Heavily based on some django snippet I found while building RGBA -> JPG + BG
support for sorl thumbnails.
from PIL import Image
png = Image.open(object.logo.path)
png.load() # required for png.split()
background = Image.new("RGB", png.size, (255, 255, 255))
background.paste(png, mask=png.split()[3]) # 3 is the alpha channel
background.save('foo.jpg', 'JPEG', quality=80)
Result @80%
https://i.stack.imgur.com/jaVG7.jpg
https://i.stack.imgur.com/9IsAI.jpg
By using Image.alpha_composite
, the solution by Yuji 'Tomita' Tomita become simpler. This code can avoid a tuple index out of range
error if png has no alpha channel.
from PIL import Image
png = Image.open(img_path).convert('RGBA')
background = Image.new('RGBA', png.size, (255, 255, 255))
alpha_composite = Image.alpha_composite(background, png)
alpha_composite.save('foo.jpg', 'JPEG', quality=80)
.convert("RGB")
before saving it
The transparent parts mostly have RGBA value (0,0,0,0). Since the JPG has no transparency, the jpeg value is set to (0,0,0), which is black.
Around the circular icon, there are pixels with nonzero RGB values where A = 0. So they look transparent in the PNG, but funny-colored in the JPG.
You can set all pixels where A == 0 to have R = G = B = 255 using numpy like this:
import Image
import numpy as np
FNAME = 'logo.png'
img = Image.open(FNAME).convert('RGBA')
x = np.array(img)
r, g, b, a = np.rollaxis(x, axis = -1)
r[a == 0] = 255
g[a == 0] = 255
b[a == 0] = 255
x = np.dstack([r, g, b, a])
img = Image.fromarray(x, 'RGBA')
img.save('/tmp/out.jpg')
https://i.stack.imgur.com/4ciZO.jpg
Note that the logo also has some semi-transparent pixels used to smooth the edges around the words and icon. Saving to jpeg ignores the semi-transparency, making the resultant jpeg look quite jagged.
A better quality result could be made using imagemagick's convert
command:
convert logo.png -background white -flatten /tmp/out.jpg
https://i.stack.imgur.com/Qi8d0.jpg
To make a nicer quality blend using numpy, you could use alpha compositing:
import Image
import numpy as np
def alpha_composite(src, dst):
'''
Return the alpha composite of src and dst.
Parameters:
src -- PIL RGBA Image object
dst -- PIL RGBA Image object
The algorithm comes from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_compositing
'''
# http://stackoverflow.com/a/3375291/190597
# http://stackoverflow.com/a/9166671/190597
src = np.asarray(src)
dst = np.asarray(dst)
out = np.empty(src.shape, dtype = 'float')
alpha = np.index_exp[:, :, 3:]
rgb = np.index_exp[:, :, :3]
src_a = src[alpha]/255.0
dst_a = dst[alpha]/255.0
out[alpha] = src_a+dst_a*(1-src_a)
old_setting = np.seterr(invalid = 'ignore')
out[rgb] = (src[rgb]*src_a + dst[rgb]*dst_a*(1-src_a))/out[alpha]
np.seterr(**old_setting)
out[alpha] *= 255
np.clip(out,0,255)
# astype('uint8') maps np.nan (and np.inf) to 0
out = out.astype('uint8')
out = Image.fromarray(out, 'RGBA')
return out
FNAME = 'logo.png'
img = Image.open(FNAME).convert('RGBA')
white = Image.new('RGBA', size = img.size, color = (255, 255, 255, 255))
img = alpha_composite(img, white)
img.save('/tmp/out.jpg')
https://i.stack.imgur.com/RBBhD.jpg
Here's a solution in pure PIL.
def blend_value(under, over, a):
return (over*a + under*(255-a)) / 255
def blend_rgba(under, over):
return tuple([blend_value(under[i], over[i], over[3]) for i in (0,1,2)] + [255])
white = (255, 255, 255, 255)
im = Image.open(object.logo.path)
p = im.load()
for y in range(im.size[1]):
for x in range(im.size[0]):
p[x,y] = blend_rgba(white, p[x,y])
im.save('/tmp/output.png')
It's not broken. It's doing exactly what you told it to; those pixels are black with full transparency. You will need to iterate across all pixels and convert ones with full transparency to white.
import numpy as np
import PIL
def convert_image(image_file):
image = Image.open(image_file) # this could be a 4D array PNG (RGBA)
original_width, original_height = image.size
np_image = np.array(image)
new_image = np.zeros((np_image.shape[0], np_image.shape[1], 3))
# create 3D array
for each_channel in range(3):
new_image[:,:,each_channel] = np_image[:,:,each_channel]
# only copy first 3 channels.
# flushing
np_image = []
return new_image
from PIL import Image
def fig2img ( fig ):
"""
@brief Convert a Matplotlib figure to a PIL Image in RGBA format and return it
@param fig a matplotlib figure
@return a Python Imaging Library ( PIL ) image
"""
# put the figure pixmap into a numpy array
buf = fig2data ( fig )
w, h, d = buf.shape
return Image.frombytes( "RGBA", ( w ,h ), buf.tostring( ) )
def fig2data ( fig ):
"""
@brief Convert a Matplotlib figure to a 4D numpy array with RGBA channels and return it
@param fig a matplotlib figure
@return a numpy 3D array of RGBA values
"""
# draw the renderer
fig.canvas.draw ( )
# Get the RGBA buffer from the figure
w,h = fig.canvas.get_width_height()
buf = np.fromstring ( fig.canvas.tostring_argb(), dtype=np.uint8 )
buf.shape = ( w, h, 4 )
# canvas.tostring_argb give pixmap in ARGB mode. Roll the ALPHA channel to have it in RGBA mode
buf = np.roll ( buf, 3, axis = 2 )
return buf
def rgba2rgb(img, c=(0, 0, 0), path='foo.jpg', is_already_saved=False, if_load=True):
if not is_already_saved:
background = Image.new("RGB", img.size, c)
background.paste(img, mask=img.split()[3]) # 3 is the alpha channel
background.save(path, 'JPEG', quality=100)
is_already_saved = True
if if_load:
if is_already_saved:
im = Image.open(path)
return np.array(im)
else:
raise ValueError('No image to load.')
Success story sharing
background = Image.new("RGB", png.size, (255, 255, 255))
.paste
do a proper blend.load
method is required for thesplit
method. And that's awesome to hear it's actually fast /and/ simple!tuple index out of range
. I fixed this by following another question(stackoverflow.com/questions/1962795/…). I had to convert the PNG to RGBA first and then slice it:alpha = img.split()[-1]
then use that on the background mask.background.paste(image, mask=image.getchannel('A'))
-- is a bit better with the pixel range issue. And likely would work for some other modes likeLA