I want to convert 32 bit png to 8 bit png with ImageMagick, but semi transparent pixels are lost. How to solve this problem? The command that I am using is the following
convert original.png PNG8:output.png
I want to convert 32 bit png to 8 bit png with ImageMagick, but semi transparent pixels are lost. How to solve this problem? The command that I am using is the following
convert original.png PNG8:output.png
Apparently, even though the PNG format actually allows any and all of the colors in an 8-bit indexed color PNG to be fully or partially transparent, ImageMagick's "PNG8" format specifier only supports GIF-style 1-bit transparency.
It's possible to produce indexed 8-bit PNGs using ImageMagick by not using the PNG8:
specifier, but simply using -colors 256
or -colors 255
* to reduce the number of colors in the image. Unfortunately, at least based on my tests using ImageMagick 6.8.9, the resulting images have some rather weird and quite unnecessarily ugly color quantization artifacts.
Fortunately, there's a much better tool for this specific job: pngquant. Using it, converting a 32-bit RGBA PNG into an 8-bit colormapped PNG with minimal quality loss is as easy as:
pngquant 256 < original.png > output.png
As a quick demonstration, here's a simple test picture (a star with a semitransparent drop shadow) converted to 8-bit PNG using various methods:
From left to right:
pngquant 256 < input.png > output.png
convert input.png -colors 255 output.png
*convert input.png PNG8:output.png
convert input.png -colors 255 PNG8:output.png
**) In the comments below, it is suggested that -colors 255
is necessary "to reserve one entry for the 'background' color." Based on my testing, I have not observed this to actually be the case; using -colors 256
will still produce an 8-bit colormapped PNG, with quantization artifacts qualitatively similar to, but differing in details from, the output with -colors 255
. Nonetheless, just to play it safe, I've used -colors 255
for the examples above. Reducing the colormap size by one color should not, in itself, significantly affect the quality of the results, as a test with pngquant 255
will demonstrate.