Filterous 2 is an Instagram-like image manipulation library for Javascript and node.js.
This is a revamped version of Filterous, which was written for JavaScript for browser about 4 years ago. This version works on both Node.js and browser, and comes with pre-defined Instagram-like filters (with the same filter names and very similar effects).
For Node.js:
first, this module uses node-canvas, so you need Cairo and Pango. Please follow the installation guide here before started.
$ npm install filterous
For Browser:
<script src="filterous2.min.js"></script>
The minified JavaScript code is available on Release page.
The usages are slightly different for Node.js and the browser.
Import an image buffer to filterous
then save
to the disk.
const filterous = require('filterous');
filterous.importImage(buffer, options)
.applyFilter(filter, value)
.save(filename);
also:
filterous.importImage(buffer)
.applyInstaFilter(filterName, options)
.save(filename);
The applyFilter()
can be used with other filters and the results are accumulative, while
the predefined applyInstaFilter()
overwrite the previous filter result.
However you can use applyFilter()
to adjust the colors after applyInstaFilter()
is applied.
Options are:
{
scale: <value>,
format: <imageFormat>
}
The value must be less than 1. You can only scale down an image. and the imageFormat is either 'png', 'gif', or 'jpeg' (default).
Using color adjustment filters:
fs.readFile('input/leia.jpg', (err, buffer) => {
if (err) throw err;
let f = filterous.importImage(buffer)
.applyFilter('brightness', 0.2)
.applyFilter('colorFilter', [255, 255, 0, 0.05])
.save('output/leia.jpg');
});
Example with predefined Instagram-like effects:
fs.readFile('input/leia.jpg', (err, buffer) => {
let f = filterous.importImage(buffer, {scale: 0.5, format: 'png'})
.applyInstaFilter('amaro')
.save('output/leia.jpg');
});
Import an image object to filterous
and render as HTML with renderHtml
.
filterous.importImage(imgObj, options)
.applyFilter(filter, value)
.renderHtml(imageDOM);
also:
filterous.importImage(imgObj, options)
.applyInstaFilter(filterName)
.renderHtml(imageDOM);
var imageDOM = document.querySelector('img.photo');
var imgObj = new Image();
imgObj.src = 'input/leia.jpg';
filterous.importImage(imgObj, options)
.applyFilter('brightness', 0.2)
.applyFilter('contrast', -0.3)
.renderHtml(imageDOM);
Example with predefined Instagram-like effects:
filterous.importImage(imgObj, options)
.applyInstaFilter(filterButton.id)
.renderHtml(imageDOM);
Most effects take a value (the amount of the effects) between -1 and 1.
for example, the value for the brightness()
0 means unchanged, -1 darkens the image, and 1 means full-brightness. The image will turn almost completely white.
Effect | Adjestment(s) |
---|---|
grayscale |
N/A |
sepia |
0 to 1 |
invert |
N/A |
brightness |
-1 to 1 |
saturation |
-1 to 1 |
contrast |
-1 to 1 |
rgbAdjust |
[r, g, b] |
colorFilter |
[r, g, b, adj] // adj is 0 to 1 |
convolute |
3x3 matrix |
Names | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
normal | clarendon | gingham | moon | lark | reyes |
juno | slumber | crema | ludwig | aden | perpetua |
amaro | mayfair | rise | hudson | valencia | xpro2 |
sierra | willow | lofi | inkwell | hefe | nashville |
stinson | vesper | earlybird | brannan | sutro | toaster |
walden | 1977 | kelvin | maven | ginza | skyline |
dogpatch | brooklyn | helena | ashby | charmes |
Note: normal
gives no filter effect. It normalize the image to the original.
Filterous takes an image into a canvas
to manipulate the pixels of the image. Unlike the CSS filters that alters how the image appearance only on browsers, the JavaScript library actually alters the pixel color values. So you can actually download the modified image.
The CanvasRenderingContext.getImageData()
method of the Canvas API returns an ImageData
object representing the underlying pixel data of the canvas, and the data
property of pixelData
stores the color info of an each pixel in the canvas. (The diagram below shows a canvas size of only 9x9 pixel to make it simple).
Each pixel in the data array consists of 4 bytes values- red, green, blue, and alpha channel, and each of the R (red), G (green), B (blue) and A (alpha transparency) values can take values between 0 and 255.
This library alters R, G, or B values of each pixel (yes, each pixel in the entire image! so the operation can be quite slow with JavaScript!) to get filtered look.
Filterous 2 for browsers should support all the modern browsers that supports Promises.
I am pretty sure this library is buggy. Please feel free to send me pull requests.