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Pamrecolor User Manual(0)			     Pamrecolor User Manual(0)

NAME
       pamrecolor - alter colors without affecting luminance

SYNOPSIS
       pamrecolor  [--colorspace=name]	[--rmult=fraction]  [--gmult=fraction]
       [--bmult=fraction] [--targetcolor=color] [--colorfile=file] [infile]

       Minimum unique abbreviation of option is acceptable.  You may use  dou‐
       ble  hyphens  instead  of single hyphen to denote options.  You may use
       white space in place of the equals sign to separate an option name from
       its value.

DESCRIPTION
       This program is part of Netpbm(1)

       pamrecolor  changes  an	image's	 colors	 to be as close as possible to
       given target colors but with the constraint that the luminance  not  be
       modified.   That	 is, the original image and the target image will look
       identical if both are converted to grayscale (e.g. with ppmtopgm(1)  ).
       You can have pamrecolor select target colors randomly, specify a single
       hue for the entire image, or take  the  target  colors  from  a	target
       image.

       pamrecolor  works on pseudo-Netpbm images based on arbitrary color spa‐
       ces.  You can define the color space explicitly or choose  on  of  many
       that pamrecolor knows by name.

       The  output  is	a  PAM	image on standard output.  Options control the
       exact format of the PAM.	 If you want a PNM (PBM, PGM, or  PPM)	image,
       use pamtopnm(1)
	on  the output.	 There is no need to convert if you will use the image
       as input to a current Netpbm program, but  many	other  programs	 don't
       know what a PAM is.

OPTIONS
       --colorspace=name
	      Designate	 the  color space to use for determining the contribu‐
	      tion to luminance of each of the	red,  green,  and  blue	 color
	      channels.	  For example, in the SMPTE-C color space an RGB color
	      is converted to grayscale by  multiplying	 the  red  channel  by
	      0.2124132,  the green channel by 0.7010437, and the blue channel
	      by 0.0865432 and summing the resulting three products.

	      When you use this option, the input and output  images  are  not
	      true  Netpbm images, because the Netpbm image format specifies a
	      particular color space.  Instead, you are using a	 variation  on
	      the format in which the sample values in the raster have differ‐
	      ent meaning.  Many programs that ostensibly  use	Netpbm	images
	      actually use a variation with a different color space, For exam‐
	      ple, GIMP ⟨http://www.gimp.org/⟩	uses sRGB  internally  and  if
	      you  have GIMP generate a Netpbm image file, it really generates
	      a variation of the format that uses sRGB.

	      pamrecolor knows the following color spaces (name values):

       adobe

	      Adobe RGB (1998) with a D65 reference white

       apple

	      Apple  RGB with a D65 reference white

       cie

	      CIE with an Illuminant E reference white

       ntsc

	      NTSC RGB with an Illuminant C reference white

       pal

	      PAL/SECAM with a D65 reference white

       smpte-c

	      SMPTE-C with a D65 reference white

       srgb

	      sRGB with a D65 reference white

       wide

	      Wide-gamut RGB with a D50 reference white

	      The default is <q>ntsc</q> because this is the color space  that
	      the  Netpbm  format of Netpbm and many other graphics utilities.
	      As a counterexample, GIMP ⟨http://www.gimp.org/⟩	uses  sRGB  as
	      its native color space.

	      The  luminance values pamrecolor uses for each of the above come
	      from Bruce Lindbloom's	Computing  RGB-to-XYZ  and  XYZ-to-RGB
	      matrices (1)
	       page.

       --rmult=fraction

       --gmult=fraction

       --bmult=fraction
	      Instead  of  selecting  a	 color	space by name, you can specify
	      explicitly the contribution of each color channel to the overall
	      luminance	 as  red,  green,  and	blue multipliers.  These three
	      options must be used together, and  the  three  fraction	values
	      must  sum	 to  1.0.   For	 example, you can specify the ProPhoto
	      (ROMM)	RGB    color	space	 with	  <q>--rmult=0.2880402
	      --gmult=0.7118741 --bmult=0.0000857</q>.

       --targetcolor=color
	      Designate	 color	as the target color for the image.  pamrecolor
	      will make each pixel as close as possible to  color  subject  to
	      the  constraint  that the luminance must stay the same as in the
	      original image.	Specify	 color	as  in	the  argument  of  the
	      ppm_parsecolor()	 library   routine   ⟨libppm.html#colorname⟩
	      (e.g., <q>hotpink</q> or <q>#ff69b4</q>).

	      If you specify neither --targetcolor nor --colorfile, pamrecolor
	      will  randomly select a target color for each pixel of the input
	      image.

	      You may not specify both -targetcolor and -colorfile.

       --colorfile=file
	      Take per-pixel target colors from Netpbm file  file  instead  of
	      using  a	single target color for the entire image.  file should
	      be a PPM or color PAM image.  If the image in the file wider  or
	      taller  than  the input image, pamrecolor uses only the left and
	      top part of it.  If the image is narrower or shorter, pamrecolor
	      considers the image to be repeated in a tile pattern.

	      If you specify neither --targetcolor nor --colorfile, pamrecolor
	      will randomly select a target color for each pixel of the	 input
	      image.

	      You may not specify both -targetcolor and -colorfile.


EXAMPLES
       This command tints an image yellow:

	   pamrecolor --targetcolor=yellow colorpic.pam > yellowpic.pam

       This command takes the colors from colorpicture.ppm and applies them to
       graypicture.pgm:

	   pamrecolor --colorfile=colorpic.ppm graypic.pgm > colorizedpic.pam

       The  grayscale  version	of  colorizedpic.pam  will  look   just	  like
       graypic.pgm.   Note that if you use a non-Netpbm tool to do the conver‐
       sion to grayscale, you may additionally need to specify an  appropriate
       --colorspace value for your conversion tool.

NOTES
       Here  are  a  couple of fun special effects you can produce with pamre‐
       color:

       ·      Specify a color file that is identical to the  input  image  but
	      with  some  large,  colored  text	 added	to  it.	 The text will
	      <q>magically</q>	vanish	when  the  image   is	converted   to
	      grayscale.

       ·      Provide  a low-contrast grayscale image — perhaps a secret
	      message written in similar shades of gray — as  the	 input
	      file  and a colorful but completely different image as the color
	      file.  If done carefully, the grayscale image can be  hidden  by
	      the  colorful image.  Only people who know to convert the result
	      to grayscale can recover the original grayscale image.

       ·      Use --targetcolor=tan to make an image look  like	 an  old-timey
	      photograph   (or,	  more	precisely,  a  sepia-toned  photograph
	      ⟨http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographic_print_toning⟩	of the
	      late 1800s).

HISTORY
       Scott Pakin wrote pamrecolor in July 2010.

       pamrecolor was new in Netpbm 10.52 (September 2010).

AUTHOR
       Copyright (C) 2010 Scott Pakin, scott+pbm@pakin.org.

SEE ALSO
       ·

	      ppmtopgm(1)

       ·

	      ppmchange(1)

       ·

	      pnmremap(1)

netpbm documentation		 31 July 2010	     Pamrecolor User Manual(0)
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