Digikam/Compress/ca: Difference between revisions
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As well as JPEG files, it can do the same for other file formats such as TIFF and PNG’s as well. Choose either to remove the original or to keep it. If you are doing this for the first time, I advise you to keep your original and later take a look yourself and delete them if you wish. Some data is lost by compression, so it can be useful to have the original for important images. | As well as JPEG files, it can do the same for other file formats such as TIFF and PNG’s as well. Choose either to remove the original or to keep it. If you are doing this for the first time, I advise you to keep your original and later take a look yourself and delete them if you wish. Some data is lost by compression, so it can be useful to have the original for important images. | ||
{{Note|1= | {{Note/ca|1=Aquesta només és la meva opinió personal respecte a la compressió d'imatges i la qualitat. El 75% de les imatges al meu photostream de flickr (http://www.flickr.com/photos/malikdhadha) han estat presses per la càmera en la configuració bàsica per omissió. Jo només les he pres en alta qualitat quan ha estat necessari.}} | ||
[[Category:Graphics]] | [[Category:Graphics]] | ||
[[Category:Fotografia/ca]] | [[Category:Fotografia/ca]] | ||
[[Category:Tutorials]] | [[Category:Tutorials]] |
Revision as of 16:42, 21 March 2012
Tornar a comprimir les imatges utilitzant digiKam
Transcrit des de l'article d'en Mohamed Malik, el 19 de febrer de 2011
Many people argue that pictures should always be taken using the highest JPEG setting available, however I am someone who doesn’t believe it, due to many reasons.
When I'm shooting pictures of friends and family and other normal occasions I always keep the JPEG setting at the basic level. In this case we have several factors that has to be taken into account. I’m not an expert in the field of photography, however, this is just my personal opinion. Most cameras have JPEG settings FINE, NORMAL & BASIC. JPEG is a lossy format meaning it is compressed. However the main difference between JPEG FINE and all other options is that each compression eliminates colors which are not visible to the human eye.
If I’m shooting JPEG fine then I can only shoot 2300 pictures into my 16GB memory card, however at the basic setting I can shoot 8200 pictures in the same card. For me storage matters and there is no need to shoot that high quality images when they all look the same on the computer. We only need that quality if we are printing each and every image to a canvas, other than that I see no need.
digiKam gives you the option to re-compress your images. This is useful if you have many JPEG pictures with JPEG setting fine ( on scale 0-100). Changing the scale from 100 to 85 can significantly reduce the file-size & look the same.
Example : A 3.1 MB file at JPEG setting 100. When this image was re-compressed to a quality of 85 the image size came just 1MB. Meaning hundred similar file will have a total of 310MB, when these hundred pictures are re-compressed to a scale of 85 you will get approximately 100Mb, in the meantime saving 210MB of hard drive space. If you have many images like I do and if you need to convert these images it will saves GB’s of hard-drive space.
To re-compress your files using digiKam go to
and a wizard will pop up.
Then click . By default digiKam has a compression level of 75. Change this setting as you wish. Please bear in mind that when you move the scale beyond 75 it will show degrade in image quality. In my personal opinion a value of 75-85 is most adequate.
As well as JPEG files, it can do the same for other file formats such as TIFF and PNG’s as well. Choose either to remove the original or to keep it. If you are doing this for the first time, I advise you to keep your original and later take a look yourself and delete them if you wish. Some data is lost by compression, so it can be useful to have the original for important images.