Software toolkit for photography post processing: from Linux to Mac OS X
I've been getting used to Mac OS X Tiger and I must repeat the obvious: It's bloody great!!
One of my current time sinks is the post-processing of digital photos ranging from trivial sharpenings to time consuming panorama builds and HDR experiments. Of course, being a Linux geek, my toolkit is all Linux-based and reasonably optimised with tens of shell and ruby scripts to automate the boring repetitive stuff. The main software components are currently composed by exiftool, ufraw, digiKam, hugin, qtpfsgui and The Gimp.
Now if only I could use all those tools on OS X...
- exiftool - A tool for reading, writing and editing meta information of images and other types of media.
- ufraw - A utility to read and manipulate raw images from digital cameras.
- qtpfsgui - An open source graphical user interface application that aims to provide a workflow for HDR imaging.
- digiKam - An advanced digital photo management application.
How wonderful it would be to have digiKam properly packaged into one .app (just like qtpfsgui) and linked to qt4-mac instead of running on X11... I'll just keep working on getting it running - compiling dependencies and dependencies of dependencies until eventually I get it right.
- hugin - An easy to use cross-platform panoramic imaging toolchain based on Panorama Tools.
Both Ippei Ukai and Harry van der Wolf have HuginOSX .app builds available on their websites. Harry's seem to be the most recently updated: http://panorama.dyndns.org/index.php?lang=en&subject=Hugin&texttag=Hugin. These snapshots run natively on cocoa, although there are some important dependencies that must be interpreted by the mono framework.
- The Gimp - the GNU Image Manipulation Program. It is a freely distributed piece of software for such tasks as photo retouching, image composition and image authoring. Functionally analogous to Photoshop.
Once I get all these working properly, I think I will be both happy and sad at the same time. Happy because I had been able to port my post-processing photography software kit to Mac OS X, which is great. But sad because by then, I will have no good reason for going back to Linux...
Cheers, PJ.
4 comments:
You sell out!!! hehehe :D
It's a strange timing because I have been using Tiger much more than Linux at home but I'm getting back to Linux (unless I get Leopard meanwhile and it makes me forget the problems I found with Tiger). I constantly miss being able to move windows using the alt key+mouse, I miss "always on top", the multiple virtual desktops and some other things. I also miss not having to reinstall my system when I have problems... I recently had to reinstall tiger and didn't like it at all.
And I also miss some applications as you do.
This post is very useful to me. I've been searching for some software to help me make my pictures a little less crappy :)
Yes, I am a sell out. The assimilation is almost complete.
About re-installations... I am not having any issues yet - does not mean that I won't...
I am compiling my web development toolkit (apache2+php5+vim) but php5 is having some issues. I may have to compile things by hand (arrrrr!).
Glad my post helped. I have also been looking at some gimp extensions to automate some fancy image trickery like some smart sharpening plugins, haze removal, white balance adjustment, etc. but haven't tested them yet.
More to come.
Cheers, PJ.
Thanks
You're welcome!
Right now I am thinking about deviating a bit from a part of the toolkit that I posted about, but I will post about it. It will be a pondered decision and it will not involve photoshop.
Cheers, PJ.
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