Preferencias del editor de imágenes¶
Preferencias de la ventana del editor¶
By default the Image Editor will use a black background behind photographs when they are displayed. If you prefer a different background color, with the options Use theme background color and Background color you can choose one here.
You can also turn off the different elements when the Image Editor is in full screen mode, as the ToolBar, the Thumbbar, the Sidebar, and the Statusbar.
Over-exposure and under-exposure settings can highlight areas of an image to indicated by dark and light marker colors that can be defined here. In the editor this viewing mode can be switched on and off with F11 and Ctrl+F11 respectively. The thresholds for over-exposure and under-exposure can be set by the adjustment bars «… percents». Check Indicate exposure as pure color if you want only pure black (RGB 0,0,0) indicated as under-exposure and only pure white (RGB 8 bit 255,255,255 respectively RGB 16 bit 65535, 65535, 65535) indicated as over-exposure.
The option Restore the settings of the Image Editor tools can be used to restore the settings of the Image Editor tools from the last session. Otherwise, the default settings will be used.
Image Versioning Settings¶
Non-Destructive Editing and Versioning gives you the freedom of editing your images, trying out whatever you want without worrying that you might regret later what you did. digiKam takes care of the original and every important intermediate step if you want.
In the checkbox at the top you can Enable Non-Destructive Editing and Versioning feature globaly.
In the first field Save files as, you can choose the file format used for saving the intermediate steps and the final result. Remember that JPEG is a lossy format. So if you need to start over from an intermediate step it wouldn’t be really non-destructive. If you can afford it in terms of space on the harddisk and loading/saving speed you better choose a lossless format like PNG or PGF for instance. Please click the information button on the right side for more detailed information.
In the next field you can decide whether the application will save changes automatically When Closing Editor or should ask first.
In the third field named Keep a snapshot of an edited image, you decide on which occasions you want the editor to save intermediate steps. Please click the information button on the right side for more detailed information.
In the last field you can adjust whether you want only the last version to be shown from the Icon-View visible In Main View (default, none of the boxes checked) or if you also want to see icons of the original version and/or intermediate steps.
Save Image Settings¶
When changes are made to JPEG files and they are saved back to the hard disk the JPEG file must be re-encoded. Each time a JPEG file is encoded a decision must be made on the level of JPEG quality that is to be applied. Unfortunately the level of quality applied is not recorded in the image file. This means that the Image Editor cannot use the same quality ratio when saving an altered image as was used for the original image. You can change the default level of quality that the Image Editor will apply when it saves altered images by moving the JPEG quality slider (1: low quality / 100: high quality and no compression). JPEG metadata is fully supported.
Chroma subsampling is the practice of encoding images by implementing more resolution for luminance information than for color information. Please read this Wikipedia article for a full explanation.
With PNG compression option, you can reduce PNG image files size. This operation does not reduce image quality because PNG uses a lossless algorithm. The only effect is that image data needs more time to compress/decompress. If you have a fast computer you can change this value to use a high compression factor (1: low compression / 9: high compression), and metadata is supported.
With Compress TIFF option, you can toggle to use Deflate compression algorithm with TIFF image files. This will reduce TIFF image files sizes. It has no image quality effect because Deflate is a lossless algorithm and metadata is supported.
With the LossLess JPEG 2000 files option allows for lossless storage, or, if the lossy options is selected, even then the quality for comparative files size is much better than normal JPEG, and metadata is supported.
With the LossLess PGF files option allows for lossless storage, or, if the lossy options is selected, even then the quality for comparative files size is much better than normal JPEG-2000 and very fast to process encoding, decoding and metadata is supported.
With the LossLess HEIF files option allows for lossless storage, or, if the lossy options is selected, even then the quality for comparative files size is much better than normal JPEG-2000, but it slower to encode and decode and it supports only 8-12 bits colors depth. This image format dedicated to replace JPEG on smartphones, not all metadata is supported.
With the LossLess WEBP files option allows for lossless storage, or, if the lossy options is selected, even then the quality for comparative files size is much better than normal JPEG-2000, but it only support 8 bits colors depth. This image format dedicated to replace PNG and JPEG on the Internet, not all metadata is supported.
With the LossLess AVIF files option allows for lossless storage, or, if the lossy options is selected, even then the quality for comparative files size is much better than normal JPEG-2000, but it slower to encode and decode and it support only 8-12 bits colors depth. This image format dedicated to be a concurrent of HEIF, not all metadata is supported.
When the option Show Settings Dialog when Saving Image Files is checked, digiKam will show a dialog where settings can be changed when saving image files, else default settings are used when saving image files.
RAW Behavior¶
In the early versions of digiKam the Image Editor was just a viewer for photographs, but it is rapidly developing into a very useful photo manipulation tool. This dialog allows you to control how the Image Editor will behave when opening RAW files.
Fast and simple, as 8 bit image: RAW files will be decoded to 8-bit color depth with a BT.709 gamma curve and a 99th-percentile white point. This mode is faster than 16-bit decoding. In 8-bit mode only the Auto Brightness setting will be taken into account.
Use the default settings, in 16 bit: If enabled, all RAW files will be decoded to 16-bit color depth using a linear gamma curve and according to the settings in the RAW Default Settings tab. To prevent dark image rendering in the editor, it is recommended to use Color Management in this mode.
Always open the Raw Import Tool to customize settings: With this option you can select which Raw Import Tool will used to open RAW files. Raw processing tools available are:
Import RAW using LibRaw: the default plugin for digiKam which will provide a fully integrated module at the Right Side Bar in the Image Editor where you can set individual parameters for every image you open.
RawTherapee: this application must be installed on your computer. RawTherapee is application software for processing photographs in RAW image formats, as created by many digital cameras. It comprises a subset of image editing operations specifically aimed at non-destructive post-production of raw photos and is primarily focused on improving a photographer’s workflow by facilitating the handling of large numbers of images.
UFRaw: this application must be installed on your computer. UFRaw is an application which can read and manipulate photographs in RAW image formats, as created by many digital cameras.
DarkTable: this application must be installed on your computer. Darktable is a free and open-source photography application program and RAW developer. It comprises a subset of image editing operations specifically aimed at non-destructive RAW image post-production.
RAW Default Settings¶
Nota
These default settings is used only with the LibRaw interface.
Demosaicing¶
A demosaicing algorithm is a digital image process used to interpolate a complete image from the partial raw data received from the color-filtered image sensor internal to many digital cameras in form of a matrix of colored pixels. Also known as CFA interpolation or color reconstruction.
Interpolate RGB as four colors: The default is to assume that all green pixels are the same. If even-row green pixels of the sensor are more sensitive to ultraviolet light than odd-row this difference causes a mesh pattern in the output; using this option solves this problem with minimal loss of detail. To resume, this option blurs the image a little, but it eliminates false 2x2 mesh patterns with VNG quality method or mazes with AHD quality method.
Do not stretch or rotate pixels: For Fuji Super CCD cameras, show the image tilted 45 degrees. For cameras with non-square pixels, do not stretch the image to its correct aspect ratio. In any case, this option guarantees that each output pixel corresponds to one RAW pixel.
Quality: digiKam offer us many alternatives e.g the most common are Bilinear, VNG, and AAHD interpolations. It seems that AAHD (for Ameliored Adaptive Homogeneity-Directed) is the best choice for quality according to some test that we have performed and the paper of the person that implemented it. This improved method based on AHD interpolation, selects the direction of interpolation so as to maximize a homogeneity metric, thus typically minimizing color artifacts. VNG (for Variable Number of Gradients) was the first algorithm used by libraw but suffers from color artifacts on the edge. Bilinear is interesting if you are looking for speed with a acceptable result. PPG (for Patterned-Pixel-Grouping) is a pixel grouping interpolation that uses assumptions about natural scenery in making estimates. It has fewer color artifacts on natural images than the VNG method. Considerate DCB and DHT interpolation as experimental method.
Pass: Set here the passes used by the median filter applied after interpolation to Red-Green and Blue-Green channels.
Refine interpolation: For DCB interpolation only, turn on the enhance interpolated colors filter to improve sharpness.
Balance de blancos¶
Method: Four options are available here: Default D65, Camera, Automatic, and Manual. Default D65 reflects normal daylight conditions. Camera uses the camera’s custom white-balance settings if set. Automatic uses by default a fixed color balance based on a white card photographed in sunlight. Manual will adjust colors according to the T(K) (for color temperature in degrees Kelvin) and the Green settings to set the green component adjusting the magenta color cast removal level.
Highlights: Default is here to consider highlights (read: part of your images that are burned due to the inability of your camera to capture the highlights) as plain / Solid white. You can get some fancy results with the unclip option which will paint the highlights in various pinks. At last you can try to consider recovering some parts of the missing information from the highlights with Rebuild option. This is possible because the blue pixels tends to saturate less quickly than the greens and the reds. digiKam will try to reconstruct the missing green and red colors from the remaining none saturated blue pixels. Of course here everything is a question of tradeoff between how much color or white you want. If you select Reconstruct as the option, you will be given the choice to set a Level. A value of 3 is a compromise and can/should be adapted on a per image basis. Unclip leave highlights unclipped in various shades of pink, and Blend clipped and unclipped values together for a gradual fade to white.
Exposure Correction (E.V): Turn on the exposure correction before interpolation which can be applied with a Linear Shift level. Amount of Highlight preservation can be also adjusted but only if shift correction is > 1.0 E.V.
Correct False Colors In Highlights: If enabled, images with overblown channels are processed much more accurately, without “pink clouds” (and blue highlights under tungsten lamps).
Auto Brightness: If disable, use a fixed white level and ignore the image histogram to adjust brightness.
Correcciones¶
Noise Reduction can be applied while demosaicing your image at a slight speed penalty. This option applies a noise reduction algorithm while the image still is in CIE Lab color space. Because the noise is only applied to the Luminosity layer (the L of the Lab), it should not blur your image as traditional noise reduction algorithms do in RGB mode. If you converted an image from RAW and it appears noisy, rather than applying a denoiser, go back and re-convert with this option enabled.
You can select a noise reduction method to apply during RAW decoding. None do not apply the noise reduction. Wavelets apply after interpolation a wavelets correction method to erase noise while preserving real details. FBDD for Fake Before Demosaicing Denoising is an experimental noise reduction method applied before interpolation.
The defaults Threshold value is 100. Higher values will increase the smoothing, and lower values will decrease it.