Perfect for profile picture processing for your website or batch work for ID cards, autocrop will output images centered around the biggest face detected.
Simple!
pip install autocrop
Autocrop can be used from the command line or directly from Python API.
Import the Cropper
class, set some parameters (optional), and start cropping.
The crop
method accepts filepaths or np.ndarray
, and returns Numpy arrays. These are easily handled with PIL or Matplotlib.
from PIL import Image
from autocrop import Cropper
cropper = Cropper()
# Get a Numpy array of the cropped image
cropped_array = cropper.crop('portrait.png')
# Save the cropped image with PIL if a face was detected:
if cropped_array:
cropped_image = Image.fromarray(cropped_array)
cropped_image.save('cropped.png')
Further examples and use cases are found in the accompanying Jupyter Notebook.
usage: autocrop [-h] [-v] [--no-confirm] [-n] [-i INPUT] [-o OUTPUT] [-r REJECT] [-w WIDTH] [-H HEIGHT] [--facePercent FACEPERCENT]
[-e EXTENSION]
Automatically crops faces from batches of pictures
options:
-h, --help Show this help message and exit
-v, --version Show program's version number and exit
--no-confirm, --skip-prompt
Bypass any confirmation prompts
-n, --no-resize Do not resize images to the specified width and height, but instead use the original image's pixels.
-i, --input INPUT
Folder where images to crop are located. Default: current working directory
-o, -p, --output, --path OUTPUT
Folder where cropped images will be moved to. Default: current working directory, meaning images are cropped in
place.
-r, --reject REJECT
Folder where images that could not be cropped will be moved to. Default: current working directory, meaning images
that are not cropped will be left in place.
-w, --width WIDTH
Width of cropped files in px. Default=500
-H, --height HEIGHT
Height of cropped files in px. Default=500
--facePercent FACEPERCENT
Percentage of face to image height
-e, --extension EXTENSION
Enter the image extension which to save at output
pics
folder, resize them to 400 px squares, and output them in the crop
directory:
autocrop -i pics -o crop -w 400 -H 400
.crop
.reject
directory:
autocrop -i pics -o crop -r reject -w 400 -H 400
.png
:
autocrop -i pics -o crop -w 400 -H 400 -e png
pics
folder and output to the crop
directory, but keep the original pixels from the images:
autocrop -i pics -o crop --no-resize
If no output folder is added, asks for confirmation and destructively crops images in-place.
You can use autocrop to detect faces in frames extracted from a video. A great way to perform the frame extraction step is with ffmpeg
:
mkdir frames faces
# Extract one frame per second
ffmpeg -i input.mp4 -filter:v fps=fps=1/60 frames/ffmpeg_%0d.bmp
# Crop faces as jpg
autocrop -i frames -o faces -e jpg
The following file types are supported:
.eps
).gif
) (only the first frame of an animated GIF is used).j2k
, .j2p
, .jp2
, .jpx
).jpeg
, .jpg
, .jpe
).im
).icns
).msp
).pcx
).png
).pbm
, .pgm
, .ppm
).sgi
).spi
).tga
).tif
, .tiff
).webp
).bmp
, .dib
).ico
).xbm
)In some cases, you may wish the package directly, instead of through PyPI:
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/leblancfg/autocrop
cd autocrop
pip install .
Development of a conda-forge
package for the Anaconda Python distribution is currently stalled due to the complexity of setting up the workflow with OpenCV. Please leave feedback on issue #7 to see past attempts if you are insterested in helping out!
Best practice for your projects is of course to use virtual environments. At the very least, you will need to have pip installed.
Autocrop is currently being tested on:
Check out:
Adapted from:
Although autocrop is essentially a CLI wrapper around a single OpenCV function, it is actively developed. It has active users throughout the world.
If you would like to contribute, please consult the contribution docs.