Kodachrome slide from 1951 or 1952. My Aunt Verla, Uncle Bill, and cousins Cathy, Bobby, and Denny. Aren't they cute?
The last few days I've been scanning a box of old Kodachrome slides my mom shot with her spiffy Exacta 35mm camera in the early 1950's. It's the camera I fell in love with as a teenager, using black and white film. A few years ago, I sold the camera on Ebay to a collector in Germany, sort of a photographic repatriation.
I've never seen these images before--they were something Mom always told me she'd show me someday, but it never happened, and it was purely by chance that I found and kept the metal slide box when I emptied her house in 1996.
It's sort of spooky to see images from her life long before she was my mother. In fact I was so focused on this glimpse into her life that I didn't notice I was scanning the images in a format my photo editing software doesn't much like. I want to print some of these pictures to send my cousins (Do you suppose they know how cute they were?), so I need to convert them to a different file format in batch mode.
Fortunately, I have ImageMagick on my Linux box already, and it has awesome command line tools (about which I know very little, so far). I do know how to convert a file format:
rebecca@hecate:~/Moms_slides$ convert covered_bridge.tiff covered_bridge.jpg
Of course, I need to do batches of convert
. I could read the ImageMagick documentation (but if that were easy, I would have done it years ago). Or, I could make an executable file of convert
commands, and run it. There was a time when I wrote sed
and awk
scripts in my sleep (I really did--I dreamed about shell scripts.) I was afraid I couldn't remember, but a little help.txt
file in an archived directory jogged my memory, and I was back in business directly.
In the spirit of my help.txt
files, where I kept a record of how I did whatever needed doing, here's how I converted a big pile of tiff
image files to png
image files.
rebecca@hecate:~/Pictures/Moms_slides$ ls *.tiff|
awk '{print "convert "$1, $1".png"}'|
sed s/.tiff.png/.png/ >temp
rebecca@hecate:~/Pictures/Moms_slides$ chmod +x temp
rebecca@hecate:~/Pictures/Moms_slides$ ./temp
And here's what the executable file looks like:
rebecca@hecate:~/Pictures/Moms_slides$ head temp
convert 5kids_easter2.tiff 5kids_easter2.png
convert 5kids_easter.tiff 5kids_easter.png
convert 5kids_pinecones.tiff 5kids_pinecones.png
convert 5kids_xmas.tiff 5kids_xmas.png
convert bill1.tiff bill1.png
convert bill2.tiff bill2.png
convert bill_junglegym.tiff bill_junglegym.png
convert bobby_blocks.tiff bobby_blocks.png
convert bobby_easter.tiff bobby_easter.png
convert bobby_junglegym.tiff bobby_junglegym.png
It took a lot longer to write up this help file
than it did to convert 75 images to a format I can send to my printer. (For what it's worth, my photo editing software can read tiff files, just not the ones created by Xsane, the scanner software I use.)
Here are some Web resources on sed and awk
that I wish had existed when I was learning those wonderful programs:
- Sed - An Introduction and Tutorial Awk Table of Contents. This is way more than I ever tried to do with awk. It's kind of inspiring....
- Linux UNIX Shell Command To Make Creat File Executable. My shell flavor is just a little different than the Unix I learned on, so I needed some help. Found it here.
4 comments:
Another handy way to do commands like that where you need to translate part of the filename is with a sh for loop, and bash's "parameter expansion"
for i in "*.tiff"; do convert $i ${i.%jpg}.png; done
Theres a section in the bash manpage "SHELL PARAMETER EXPANSION" that show how to use the curly braces to fiddle with the value of a variable.
They really ARE cute. I love our old family slides.
I loved White Noise when I read it but I bet I wouldn't now. Novels ... I used to read them but I just don't like them anymore. There is so much non-fiction I'm interested in - is that it?
Happy Tuesday, Rebecca.
Goose,
That's so cool! I'll try that right away!
Reya,
I enjoy nonfiction more than novels these days too. What's up with that?
Post a Comment