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Programs for photo processing. Batch processing of photos in FastStone Image Viewer Now let's move on to the instructions for batch processing of photos

Hello, dear friends and blog guests! What is and how is batch photo processing done? This article is devoted to an overview of the program for viewing, editing and processing graphic images FastStone Image Viewer. The program is quite old and many users know about it and, most likely, use it often.

Batch processing of photos in the FastStone Image Viewer program will be a convenient and enjoyable job for you!

Therefore, today we will get acquainted with its interface and one of the coolest, in my opinion, functionality - batch photo processing. This option is useful for managing huge volumes of photos stored on users' hard drives.

In addition, the main features of FastStone Image Viewer include:

Red eye removal;

Improvement of colors;

Slideshow function;

Image rotations;

Crop and resize images;

And much, much more.

In a word, if you need some kind of processing or editing of photos and pictures, but you don’t know Photoshop, try FastStone Image Viewer first.

Moreover, the program’s arsenal includes all kinds of filters, stencils, the option of adding watermarks, support for all popular graphic formats and even RAW formats from semi-professional and professional cameras.

Of course, the program is rather weak for professionals, but for the average user it is quite suitable.

Batch Photo Processing and Image Viewer Interface

The Image Viewer interface is quite simple and has a Russian version. The program window is divided into two parts:

Left – Explorer or Directory Tree, designed for quick navigation;

Right – File Manager, designed to manage archives of pictures or photographs.

In addition, as you can see in my screenshot, under Explorer we can expand the third part - Preview Mode.

To assign FastStone Image Viewer as the default (default) viewer for all graphic files, you need to make some minor adjustments.

You can, of course, right-click on each individual file format, select “Open with...” and in the window that opens, specify FS Image Viewer, not forgetting to check the “Use this program for all files of this type” checkbox. However, there are many file formats and this process will take quite a long time.

Therefore, we will make all the settings inside the program itself. IN top menu select the “Settings” tab, and then “Program settings” or just click hotkey F12.

In the window that opens, we are primarily interested in the “View” tab, where on the right side, opposite the “Open associated file” item, you need to select “in windowed mode" This is the most convenient mode when opening a file for the first time, but you can always change it.

After this setting, go to the “Associations” tab, select all file formats and check the box “Add “Browse in FastStone” item in the menu Windows Explorer" Then click OK.

Now you can close the program itself and open any image by double-clicking the mouse, it will automatically open in FS Image Viewer.

As you can see, the picture was opened in FS Image Viewer in windowed mode, but, as I said above, we can always change it.

I think you can figure out the navigation by pictures yourself. I’ll just draw your attention to the “Edit”, “Color”, “Effects” and “Create” tabs. This is where you can edit pictures or photographs as you please.

This concludes our introduction to the interface and moves on to Batch processing of graphic files.

Batch photo processing in FastStone Image Viewer

Batch processing means that we can set certain parameters (size, format, volume, quality, etc.) for a large group of pictures or photographs and apply them to absolutely all pictures in the selected folder.

We launch the program itself by clicking on its shortcut, on the left side we indicate the folder with the photos that we want to process. After that, you will see all the photos from this folder on the right side. Click on the “Tools” menu at the top, and in it select the “Batch conversion/renaming” item.

And as I promised, this is where the whole Universe opens up for all kinds of experiments for converting files.

At the top of the window itself, you can see two tabs: Batch Conversion and Batch Rename. Let's look at the first tab.

In the Batch Conversion tab we can change formats, sizes, change file names and much, much more.

On the left side of the window we can see a list of all our pictures or photographs. To process them in batches, you need to click the “Add all” button. After which all files will move to the right side. We will make all other settings in the lower right part of the window.

In the “Output format” field, you can specify the format of the files that we want to receive. Just to the right of this field there is a “Settings” button where you can set additional settings.

In the “Output folder” field, you should specify the folder where all files will be saved after processing.

We check the box “Change settings (dimensions...)” and the “Advanced” button becomes active; clicking on it will open the corresponding window.


This window has a lot of tabs with a wide variety of settings:

Resize;

trim;

Color depth;

Image settings;

Water sign;


I think it doesn’t make sense to describe them all, because it would require a separate article. I hope you can figure them out for yourself. I’ll just note that in order to make your own changes, you need to tick a single box on each tab, at the very top. Then the empty tab fields will display all the settings.

After all the settings have been made, click the “Start” button on the “Batch Conversion” tab, and the process itself will start. I repeat, all converted images will be saved in the folder that we specified in the “Output folder” field.


It may be needed when we just need to rename a large group of files. And here the principle is exactly the same: first of all, we need to add all the files from the left side to the right. All other settings are also made in the lower right part of the tab.

Tools for automating actions in Photoshop can significantly reduce the time spent on performing the same type of operations. One of these tools is batch processing of images (photos).

Meaning batch processing consists of recording actions in a special folder (action), and then applying this action to an unlimited number of photos. That is, we process it manually once, and the rest of the images are processed automatically by the program.

It makes sense to use batch processing in cases where it is necessary, for example, to change the size of photographs, raise or lower the lighting, or make the same color correction.

So let's get started with batch processing.

First you need to place the original images in one folder. I have three photographs prepared for the lesson. I named the folder "Batch Processing" and placed it on the desktop.

If you noticed, this folder also contains a subfolder "Ready photos". The results of processing will be saved in it.

It’s worth noting right away that in this lesson we will only learn the process, so many operations with photos will not be performed. The main thing is to understand the principle, and then you can decide for yourself what kind of processing to do. The procedure will always be the same.

And one more thing. In the program settings, you must disable warnings about color profile mismatches, otherwise, every time you open a photo you will have to press the button OK.

Let's go to the menu "Editing - Color Settings" and uncheck the boxes indicated in the screenshot.


Now you can start...

After analyzing the pictures, it becomes clear that they are all slightly darkened. Therefore, we will lighten them and tint them a little.

Open the first picture.

Then call the palette "Operations" in the menu "Window".

In the palette, you need to click on the folder icon, give the new set a name and click OK.

Then we create a new operation, also call it something and press the button "Record".

First, let's resize the image. Let's say we need images no more than 550 pixels wide.
Let's go to the menu "Image - Image Size". Change the width to the desired one and click OK.



As you can see, changes have occurred in the palette of operations. Our action was successfully recorded.

For lightening and toning we will use "Curves". They are called by keyboard shortcut CTRL+M.

In the window that opens, set the current on the curve and drag it in the direction of lightening until the desired result is achieved.

Then we go to the red channel and adjust the colors a little. For example, like this:

At the end of the process, click OK.

When recording an action, there is one important rule: if you use tools, adjustment layers and other functions of the program, where the values various settings change “on the fly”, that is, without the need to press the OK button, then these values ​​​​must be entered manually and press the ENTER key. If this rule is not followed, then Photoshop will record all intermediate values ​​while you drag, for example, the slider.

Let's continue. Let's assume that we have already completed all the steps. Now we need to save the photo in the format we need.
Press the key combination CTRL+SHIFT+S, select the format and location to save. I selected the folder "Ready photos". Click "Save".

The last step is to close the image. Don't forget to do this, otherwise all 100500 photos will remain open in the editor. Nightmare…

We refuse to save the source code.

Let's take a look at the operations palette. We check whether all actions were recorded correctly. If everything is in order, then press the button "Stop".

The action is ready.

Now we need to apply it to all photos in the folder, and automatically.

Let's go to the menu "File - Automation - Batch Processing".

In the function window, select our set and operation (the last ones created are automatically registered), specify the path to the folder with the sources and the path to the folder in which you want to save the finished images.

After pressing the button "OK" processing will begin. The time spent on the process directly depends on the number of photos and the complexity of the operations.

Use the automation provided to you by Photoshop and save a lot of time on processing your photos.

4 programs for batch image processing

Post-processing an image typically involves resizing, cropping, adjusting exposure, contrast, noise reduction, and background removal. Applying these changes to a single image is quite simple. However, this is incredibly tedious if you want to apply them to hundreds of pictures. However, there are 4 excellent programs for this!

1. ImBatch

ImBatch- This free tool for , used for post-processing large volumes digital images. It provides plenty of options for cropping, resizing, converting, rotating and renaming files. Unique feature ImBatch is that it allows you to create photo editing projects and automatically edit large volumes of images, thereby saving huge amounts of time.

2. FastStone Photo Resizer

FastStone Photo Resizer is a tool with batch processing capabilities, ideal for enhancing large images at once. It provides a user-friendly interface that allows you to easily resize, rotate, crop, rename, add watermarks, add text, change color depth, apply color effects, and add effects to your images without losing quality. The tool supports multi-threading to process multiple images simultaneously at faster speeds.

3. Light Image Resizer

Light Image Resizer is a software program used to resize large volumes of images in batches. It compresses, converts and creates copies of multiple images at once.

A new window will open containing two sections with files and several commands:

The right column with files shows all files in the current folder, the left column shows those selected for batch processing. You can add or remove selected files using the buttons "Add", "Add all", "Delete", "Clear"

At the bottom left are tools for bulk renaming and changing the creation date of pictures; working with them is intuitive.

In the "Output folder" line you can select or create new folder to save converted photos.

To perform most bulk operations, check the "Change settings (sizes...)" checkbox and click on the "Advanced" button:

Clicking the button opens a new window:

Using this window we can specify one or more types of image editing:

  • Resizing
  • Turn
  • Trimming
  • Changing the Canvas Size
  • Color Depth Correction
  • Changing contrast, brightness, saturation, color gamut, blurring the image, converting to negative, black and white and sepia
  • Image resolution
  • Text overlay
  • Watermarking
  • Adding a frame to photos

I repeat, significant advantage Bulk photo editing using FastStone Image Viewer is that we can apply one or several types of editing at once.

For example, I want to change the brightness of selected photos. To do this, I click on the “Image Settings” tab, check the “Change brightness, contrast, gamma, saturation” checkbox and the following parameters appear in the window:

Changing any parameters in such a window is not convenient, because we don't see the image itself. Therefore, we click on the “Design and Preview” button, and a new window opens for us, where there are all these settings, and most importantly, the photo itself is displayed:

The interface of this window is convenient and intuitive.

On the right, in the "Input List" section, you can select a photo for preview.

There are zoom buttons at the top right: With their help, you can view the photo in real size, adjust it to the size of the window, increase or decrease the display scale.

To see the result of the changes, click the "Preview" button.

After you have set the necessary settings, click the “Close” button, the window closes, we get to the previous window and can proceed directly to the conversion by clicking OK or add more settings by selecting the desired tab at the top.

After clicking OK, the window closes and we return to the main dialog box batch conversion. Click the "Start" button. The batch conversion process starts, and the process status is displayed:

When finished, click OK. Ready! The processed images are saved under the old names in the specified save folder, or, if the folder was not specified, the images are saved in the original folder under the old names with numbers and/or prefixes and/or suffixes added, depending on your settings.

I needed a utility for batch image processing. Before this, I only did image processing in the program Adobe Photoshop, but putting Photoshop on that laptop would be too much, so I installed XnConvert on it. I believe this the best free program for batch processing of photos and images.

The XnConvert program is available for all three families of operating systems: Windows, macOS, Linux. It is noteworthy that among Windows operating systems, not only Windows 10 is supported, but also previous operating systems Windows systems 8.1, Windows 7, Windows Vista and Windows XP.

Main features of the program:

  • Resizing
  • Cropping
  • Watermarking
  • Overlay text
  • Rotate images
  • Removing EXIF ​​and other meta data
  • and much more...

Let's look at the main use case for XnConvert. For example, we have a folder with photos that need to be resized, added a watermark, and compressed a little. XnConvert allows you to do all this. You simply select your folder with images, set the necessary settings and choose where you will save the files. Below I will discuss these possibilities in detail.

Appearance of XnConvert.

The program interface is divided into tabs. Select input images, select actions, select a folder where to save the data and select image quality in the settings.

In the program you can do a chain of actions:

Here is a list of possible actions:

And this without filters! The program's possibilities are truly endless for batch image processing.

In summary, if you need a simple utility for batch image processing, then feel free to choose XnConvert, you can’t go wrong.



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