32
votes

After upgrading ImageMagick text quality got degraded when convert pdf to jpeg:

Old image enter image description here

New Image enter image description here Conversion command: convert foo.pdf foo.jpeg

Old ImageMagick version:

[root@home]#  convert -version
Version: ImageMagick 6.2.8 05/07/12 Q16 file:/usr/share/ImageMagick-6.2.8/doc/index.html
Copyright: Copyright (C) 1999-2006 ImageMagick Studio LLC

generated files size:

-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 139K Apr  2 16:11 foo-0.jpeg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 130K Apr  2 16:11 foo-1.jpeg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 334K Mar 24 14:27 foo.pdf

After upgrading ImageMagick

[root@home]#  convert -version
Version: ImageMagick 6.7.8-10 2012-08-17 Q16 http://www.imagemagick.org
Copyright: Copyright (C) 1999-2012 ImageMagick Studio LLC
Features: OpenMP

generated files size:

-rw-r--r-- 1 root root  60K Apr  2 16:11 foo-0.jpeg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root  55K Apr  2 16:11 foo-1.jpeg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 334K Mar 24 14:27 foo.pdf

I've tried using antialias flag:

convert -antialias  foo.pdf foo.jpeg

Which did nothing, I've tried setting an higher quality:

convert -quality 100 foo.pdf foo.jpeg

and super sampling:

convert -density 288 -background white -alpha off foo.pdf -resize 25%  foo.jpeg

both gave bigger files and better results, but ran more time and had lower quality that the old ImageMagick version.

any advises?

Link to the file

3
Can you provide a download link to the sample file for me to test? - likeitlikeit
I've added a link to the end of the question, thanks - Kuf
Tried using a later version of ImageMagick? $ convert --version Version: ImageMagick 6.7.7-10 2012-08-17 Q16. This is on Linux Mint Nadia - Atle
Also have a look at this: stackoverflow.com/questions/6605006/… - Atle
You want -alpha remove instead of -alpha off. - Skippy le Grand Gourou

3 Answers

37
votes

I see the same problem with your sample file. It looks like ImageMagick's delegates for the PDF conversion may have changed with the new install.

If you try convert -verbose foo.pdf foo.jpeg, do you see -sDEVICE=pngalpha in the command that gets sent to gs? The pnmraw device has been used in the past, and switching back to that seems to fix the problem for me.

In ImageMagick's delegates.xml file (which may be in /etc/ImageMagick, but could be somewhere else depending on your setup), look for the decode="ps:alpha" delegate line and change -sDEVICE=pngalpha in the command to -sDEVICE=pnmraw. (You can probably just search for pngalpha in the file.)

10
votes

it seem that problem at DPI. when convert pdf, imagemagick using Ghostscript. you can skip using imagemagick.

$ gs -q -dQUIET -dSAFER -dBATCH -dNOPAUSE -dNOPROMPT -dMaxBitmap=500000000 -dGridFitTT=2 -dUseCropBox -dTextAlphaBits=4 -dGraphicsAlphaBits=4 -r200x200 -sDEVICE=jpeg -dJPEGQ=100 -sOutputFile=foo-%05d.jpg foo.pdf

set -r option higher value. Ghostscript have default value is 100DPI.

or using convert option -density. this option set pdf converted DPI.

$ convert -density 200x200 foo.pdf foo.jpg
0
votes

PDF files are vector files and have no specific size. Their size is controlled by defining the density and units before reading in the PDF file. You can get better quality for the same desired output file size by supersampling. That means rasterize the PDF to a large size and then resize to your desired actual size. For example in ImageMagick:

convert -units pixelsperinch -density 288 image.pdf -resize 25% output.jpg

The nominal density if left off is 72 dpi. So 72*4=288. Then resize by 1/5=25% gets back to the same default size, but should look much better. Change the density or resize to deal with quality and final size as desired.