With GNU Parallel and Imagemagick installed, this command should do it:
parallel convert {} {.}.jpg ::: *.cr2
As always, backup your files before you run things some internet rando gave you.
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With GNU Parallel and Imagemagick installed, this command should do it:
parallel convert {} {.}.jpg ::: *.cr2
As always, backup your files before you run things some internet rando gave you.
Check out mogrify
. I think it's installed standard with ImageMagick, and it does wildcard conversions.
Can mogrify
do format conversion? I thought it was for editing images. It doesn't even seem to have a way to specify input and output filenames.
Yes. I've used it to batch convert PNG and jpg to webp.
Thank you for this! I will test it out
Do you have an example?
I'm not sure what you're asking for. That's the command. Unless you meant an explanation?
The basic command is convert filename.cr2 filename.jpg
.
That parallel
command runs the convert
command on all of the .cr2
files in the current directory, running a bunch of them simultaneously. {}
is replaced with the name of a file, and {.}
is replaced with the filename without the extension.
https://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/parallel_examples.html
If you didn't want to use parallel and are okay with it slowly converting one file at a time, you can just use a for loop:
for file in *.cr2 ; do
convert $file ${file%.cr2}.jpg
done
That one uses some Bash variable magic to remove the .cr2 and add .jpg to the file name of the output file.
convert
is smart enough that you can just give it an output name ending in .jpg and it knows it should convert the input file to JPEG.
Example? They gave you the exact thing to run.
Your best bet would be imagemagick
in command-line
https://blog.nathantsoi.com/article/Batch_Convert_CR2_to_JPG/
Since you mentioned darktable I assume you already know this, but depending on the camera's raws and the presets that imagemagick has for converting these photos the results might be undesirable if not inspected or tweaked. Not disparaging any advice given here, just mentioning that generally raws are edited on a case by case basis to fix camera artifacts and color issues. Hope the solutions others have posted work out for you!
Gimp has a batch mode and is open source iirc
got any instructions?
I'm a bit of a basic batch myself
That has to be deliberate doesn't it?
I use XnviewMP for different things. It has a ton of functionality and they have other products as well that might help. https://www.xnview.com
Throw them into darktable and export them to JPEG
for 282 photos this will take ages
It's actually pretty quick for me with 95% JPEGs. But your mileage may of course vary.
You can just select them all and export them into a folder. Maybe overnight?
is there an equivalent to Directory Opus on linux?