Image Enhancements
You have your choice of these image enhancements:
-
- Clipboard as CLUT
- use the clipboard image as a color lookup table.
- Spiff
- enhances the intensity differences between the lighter and darker elements of the image.
- Clahe
- contrast limited adaptive histogram equalization. A good starting point is 2x2+128+3.
- Dull
- reduces the intensity differences between the lighter and
darker elements of the image.
- Contrast Stretch
- improve the contrast in an image by `stretching' the range of intensity values. A good starting point is a 1% black and white point (e.g. 1%).
- Equalize
- perform histogram equalization on the image.
- Normalize
- transform image to span the full range of color values.
- Negate
- replace very pixel with its complementary color (white becomes
black, yellow becomes blue, etc.).
- Hue
- vary the percent hue of the image (0-200%).
- Saturation
- vary the percent saturation of the image (0-200%).
- Brightness
- vary the percent brightness of the image. Reasonable values
extend from 50 (darker) to 150 (brighter).
- Gamma
- level of gamma correction. The same color image displayed on
two different workstations may look different due to differences in
the display monitor. Use gamma correction to adjust for this color
difference. Reasonable values extend from 0.8 to 2.3.
You can apply separate gamma values to the red, green, and blue
channels of the image with a gamma value list delineated with
slashes (e.g. 1.7/2.3/1.2).
- Level
- adjust the level of image contrast. Give three point values
delineated with commas: black, white, and mid (e.g. 10%,90%,1.0).
The white and black points range from 0 to 100% and mid ranges
from 0 to 10.
- Linear Stretch
- linear with saturation stretch. Give two point values
delineated with commas: black, and white (e.g. 10,90%).
The white and black points range from 0 to 100%.
- Sigmoidal Contrast
- sigmoidal non-lineraity contrast control. Give two values contrast and midpoint. Increase the contrast of the image using a sigmoidal transfer function without saturating highlights or shadows. Contrast indicates how much to increase the contrast (0 is none; 3 is typical; 20 is a lot); mid-point indicates where midtones fall in the resultant image (0 is white; 50% is middle-gray; 100% is black). A good starting point is 3x50%.