In other words, you want all the greens to lean more towards the green in your color palette (in hue, saturation, etc), all the oranges lean towards the orange in your palette, etc. You also have separate color palette (ex: ) and what you are looking to do is to slightly modify the photo so that it fits the color palette more. Thank you too, for your very explanatory video.I'm looking for terms, search keywords, or filter names related to how to do the following: (04-12-2021, 10:13 AM)rich2005 Wrote: Quote:At the top of layer image list, i have a separate layer with a logo that must be exported with EACH levels. Convert to color-indexed, providing the palette created previously.Copy the color map as a palette (in the Palettes list, the color map of the current image is the first one, so you just duplicate and rename it).Ģ) Gather the palettes (if necessary, the palettes list right-click menu has a "Show in file manager" entry)ģ) Create a composite palette: add all color lines from all palettes and remove the duplicates (a good text editor must have something to sort lines, so locating duplicates shouldn't be hard).Ĥ) Save that palette to the Gimp palette directory.Convert to color-index if not done (no need to save at that point).Use one of those and put in Indexed Mode creating a 32 colour colormapĪdd the jpgs (with logo) as layers, to that indexed image.Įxport the layers to individual indexed png images.Ī bit at the end about editing those indexed png's preserving the 32 color colormap. Open the images as layers including the logo.Īdd the logo to all layers using sg-combine-bg.scmĮxport all layers as RGB jpeg, now with the logo. However, back to the original specification, consistent colormap with 32 colours. Remember, that logo adds to each image colours, better if you can keep to a single color, even better if black or white. Use this script it does not require all layers the same size. You need to add your logo to the images in RGB mode, before you Index them. Quote:At the top of layer image list, i have a separate layer with a logo that must be exported with EACH levels. Why "getting them out of that stack" it's a problem? ofn-export-layersexport each level to a separate file. Can be a solution opening all imagesall images side by side in mosaic to index all togethers? forcing index palette applpying on layers, i see, it's ok, obviously it force some images with "new" colora to apply a similar one. For example some do not have the red that is present in others or similar cases. They are illustrations with sharp colors and all the images as mentioned have generally the same colors except for a few. (04-11-2021, 10:56 AM)rich2005 Wrote: Quote:the input images are jpg's and are not indexed. I am sure you will get better advice than mine. Do not know why, gives a "palette has different number of entries error", but worth a try. Ofnuts has a plug-in ofn-replace-colormap.py from Which as the name implies replaces the colormap in an indexed image. The scripts I have, give indexed images with individual (different) colourmaps, which is normal Gimp behaviour. It is getting them out of that stack of images that is a problem. That will (1) force the (jpeg) layers to indexed mode (2) apply the common colormap. To get a common colormap, open a base image in Indexed mode, with the desired colormap. Gimp is not too good with indexed colormaps. It is the indexed image colormap that you will be editing. Quote:I would like to index all images so that they share the same color palette. For example some do not have the red that is present in others or similar cases.Īs jpegs they are liable to have lots of colours, might look sharp but what does Colors -> Info -> Color Cube Analysis report. Quote:the input images are jpg's and are not indexed.
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