Fotoxx User Guide  v.14.03

For experienced users, skip to the Table of Contents.
Review the recent changes to this guide.

Summary Description
Fotoxx is a Linux application for editing photos and managing a large image collection. The goal is to meet the needs of serious photographers while remaining fast and easy to use. Fotoxx is standards compliant, so work done in Fotoxx can be shared with other photo and image processing applications (no lock-in).

Fotoxx Capabilities
  + Thumbnail browser / navigator with variable size thumbnails and list view.
  + Camera RAW file conversion with retention of 16 bits per color.
  + Internal processing in 24 bits per color (float), file output in 8 or 16 bits.
  + A comprehensive set of image edit, retouch and repair functions:
       + brightness, color, contrast, tone mapping, crop, rotate, de-noise, paint, clone,
       + add text, warp, HDR, panorama, mashup, art effects, metadata edit and report ...
  + Edit / copy / paste selected image objects or areas, without using layers.
  + Rapid visual feedback using the full image or selected enlarged area.
  + Batch tools for renaming, resizing, converting, adding and revising metadata.
  + Search images using any metadata and directory/file names or substrings
  + Named collections of images (sometimes called views).
  + Comprehensive user guide and help popups.
Hardware Requirements
Fotoxx works best on a strong computer (2+ GHz, 2+ GB memory, 7200 rpm disk).
Multiple CPU cores are utilized for compute intensive functions (e.g. image warp).
Slower computers will work, but may be quite slow for some functions.
Monitors smaller than about 1600x1000 will feel very confining.
Typical notebooks with poor color accuracy should NOT be used for photo editing.

Software Requirements
Most recent releases of Linux will work (Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Suse ... ).
Fotoxx packages are made with Ubuntu.

License and Warranty
Fotoxx is licensed under the GNU General Public License v3.
Fotoxx is not warranted for any purpose, but if you find a bug, I will try to fix it.

Origin and Contact
Fotoxx originates from the author's web site  http://kornelix.com/fotoxx.
Other web sites may offer it for download (modifications may have been made).
If you have questions, suggestions, or a bug to report, you may contact me.

Program Updates
To be automatically informed of new releases, subscribe to recent changes (RSS).
Latest source code for use with  $ make install:  tarballs
Latest installable packagespackages

Fotoxx packages are also available from many web sites and Linux distros.
Some of these are not updated regularly and may be quite old.
It is better to use the above links.




Getting Started

Quick Start
This is a 1-page document shown when Fotoxx is started the first time.
It is also available via the menu  Help > Quick Start.  quickstart-en.html

Fotoxx is easy to use but unconventional. Read the first few pages of this guide - up to the table of contents below. The rest can be used for reference as needed. Use the F1 key at any time to view information for the current or last-used menu function.

When you see the word directory, substitute folder if this is your way of thinking. The terms file and image and image file mean a single file of type JPEG, PNG, TIFF, etc. containing a single image (photo or illustration).

Installation
To install Fotoxx, try the appropriate package first: packages. This may work with one click.
If not, you must install from source code. Instructions are here: tarballs.

Initialization
Fotoxx needs to know where all your image files are located (directory and file names) and their imbedded metadata (dates, tags (keywords), geotags, captions, comments, ratings). This data is indexed for fast searching. Fotoxx also creates thumbnail images on disk, so that the gallery windows (thumbnail pages) will work fast. Fotoxx does not modify or copy your image files - it only reads them to get data for the search index and thumbnails.

When Fotoxx starts the first time, you are asked to supply a few key items of information for the initial file indexing process:

Top image Directories are those containing your image files, e.g. /home/<user>/Pictures  or similar. Subdirectories underneath your top directories are automatically included, to any depth. Use the [browse] button to locate and add your top image directories. Other files may be mixed with your image files. The simplest way is to use the single directory /home/<user>, but it is better to separate the image files from the hundreds of thousands of other files that may be under /home/<user>.

Thumbnails Directory is where the thumbnail files will be placed. These are generally 1% as large as typical photo files (10K bytes compared to megabytes). You can use the supplied default or set another location.

If you have many thousands of images, the file index function may need significant time. A strong computer will process 1500+ images per minute. Some computers will be much slower. When you start Fotoxx after new image files have been added to your collection, the Index Files function starts automatically to process the new images. This normally needs a few seconds unless there are hundreds of new images. For more details, see Index Image Files.

Test Run
After Fotoxx finishes initialization, use the [open] button on the toolbar to select an image file to view. Choose the menu Retouch > Retouch Combo. Use the brightness and contrast sliders, or drag the brightness curves. The image should respond appropriately. Use the [cancel] button to leave the dialog without changing the image file. Use the Tab G button (2nd icon) to see all the images in the current directory. Use the navigation buttons above this window to navigate within the directory. Click on a thumbnail image to view the image in Tab F (top icon). If this all works then Fotoxx is installed and working OK.

Essential Information for those who hate big user manuals (you and me):
  + Menu functions and dialogs have popup help activated by keyboard F1.
  + Zoom an image in/out with left/right mouse buttons or mouse wheel.
  + Pan and scroll a zoomed image with mouse left-drag.
  + Tab G: view a thumbnail gallery of images in the current directory.
  + Click a thumbnail: show large image in Tab F. Use menus to edit the image.
  + The window title bar shows the current image file and directory path.
  + The status bar at the bottom shows image and edit status information.

This User Guide is available in the menu Help > User Guide. The F1 key will show a help topic for the current menu or dialog. This appears in your web browser.


Navigation - Tabs F and G
   
Tab F (file) is used for viewing and editing image files.
Click the top icon (Venus) for Tab F.

Tab G (gallery) shows thumbnails of all the images in the same directory as Tab F.
Click the 2nd icon for Tab G.



Use window Tab G to show a gallery of thumbnail images, showing image files in the current directory. Use this window to scroll around and select image files by clicking thumbnails. The arrow buttons allow scrolling forward or back by rows or pages. Use the zoom buttons to change the thumbnail size and the number of thumbnails fitting in the window. Clicking on a thumbnail will show the full-size image in Tab F. Pressing Tab G will show the gallery, with the current image in Tab F scrolled to the top row. The current directory path is shown at the top of the gallery window. Click on one of the higher level directories to go to that directory. Its subdirectories will be shown as folders. Click on one of them to go to that directory. Click the [Top] button to choose another top image directory (if more than one), the root directory ( / ) your home directory (/home/<user>), a gallery of the most recently viewed images, or a gallery of the newest images added to the image database.

There are several types of gallery windows:
  + Directory: all the image files in a single directory (folder)
  + Search results: images found by the search function, in various directories
  + Images in a named collection, which may be in various directories
  + Recent Files: the most recently viewed or edited images
  + Newest Files: the images most recently added to the image database
The gallery window title bar will show the directory name (path), the collection name, or "Search Results" or "Recent Files" or "Newest Files".  They all work the same way: use the navigation buttons in Tab G to move around within the gallery. Click a thumbnail to see the full size image in Tab F. Use the navigation buttons in Tab F (arrows) to step sequentially through the gallery forwards or backwards. Select Tab G to go back to the gallery, which is positioned to show the Tab F image in the top row.

If the current gallery is not a directory gallery (e.g. Recent Files), you can navigate to a directory by using the [Top] button, the [Open] button, or the [Sync.G] button. The [Sync.G] button replaces the current gallery (e.g. Recent Files) with the directory of the current file in Tab F.

The [Sort] button is used to sort the thumbnails by file name, file modification date, or photo date (from EXIF data). The displayed date is photo date unless the sort is by file date. Ascending or descending order can be chosen.

Mouse Actions on Image Window
To zoom the image in the main window, left-click a position on the image. The image will grow with each click and the clicked position will move to the center. A right-click will restore the image to fit within the window. To pan or scroll a zoomed image, left-drag the mouse across the image. This works like invisible scroll bars: the image moves in the opposite direction of the mouse. Diagonal scrolls work. The mouse wheel may also be used to zoom the image in or out. The middle mouse button (wheel) will make a zoomed image re-center at the mouse position. In the menu Tools > User Settings, you can change the mouse pan/scroll mode to make the image move with the mouse instead of in the opposite direction.

Mouse Ownership
Some dialogs use the mouse to reference or alter the image in the main window. There may be more than one such dialog active at the same time. The mouse is also used to zoom and scroll the image, and you may need to do this while using a dialog. Therefore it is important to understand who owns the mouse (which dialog or main window) and how to change the ownership: Dialog buttons mostly work as follows:
    [Proceed] - proceed with lengthy task based on dialog inputs.
    [Apply] - apply settings from dialog to image, leave dialog active.
    [Done] - same as [Apply], but the dialog is closed.
    [Cancel] - discard image changes and close the dialog.


General Editing Procedures
The image in the main window (the current image) can be operated on with the edit functions (the menus Image, Retouch, Repair, Color, Bend, Effects, Combine). These functions modify the current image in memory. You can use these functions in any order, and the changes are accumulated for the current image and shown in the main window. The Toolbar [undo] and [redo] buttons can be used to review the before/after results for the current active edit function. After the function is closed (dialog [Done] or [Cancel]), these buttons can be used to review all the edits done to the current image. When finished editing an image, use [Save] to save the modified image back to the same file, save to a new file version (filename.v01.jpg), or input a new file name and/or location. Many image edit dialogs have sliders, spin buttons, or editable curves that immediately update the image in the main window. The reaction time depends on the size of the image, the complexity of the function and the speed of your computer. This is typically <1 second for a strong computer and images <20 megapixels.

Edit Workflow
You can minimize the time needed to process many images if you understand the following:
Example: you can perform the initial trim and rotate for a batch of new images as follows:
      1.  Open the first image and start the Trim/Rotate function.
      2.  If needed, adjust the trim rectangle and/or angle, press [Save].
      3.  Press [Next]. Repeat from step 2.

Simple Workflow
Most of the time you can just edit the JPEG file that comes out of the camera. Use the following more complex procedure only if you see "color bands" or "posterization" after editing the image, an indication that JPEG 8-bit color is limiting the image quality.

Complex Workflow
To edit with deep color (more than 8 bits), you can start with RAW files from your camera. There are three options for processing RAW files:
RAW files have typically 10-12 bit color depth and noise beyond that. Conversion into a PNG or TIFF file with 16 bit color will preserve the additional color depth available in the RAW file. The high color depth reduces the risk of visible "color bands" when retouch functions are used to radically shift the brightness distribution. When finished editing, convert the final file to JPEG (quality level 70 or greater) to reduce the file size to 10% or less. Note that editing in deep color is more important than having deep color in the final image. You will rarely be able to see any difference between a 16 bit TIFF/PNG file and a JPEG made from that same file. To preserve the possibility of re-editing the image later, keep the RAW file, which is much smaller than the TIFF or PNG file.

Curve Editing
Some image edit functions use editable curves. You can manipulate the curves to change some property of the image depending on some other property. The example here shows a brightness curve, whereby you can change brightness depending on brightness (e.g. brighten dark image areas without changing bright areas). Generally, the X-axis of the curve represents the input property (brightness in this example) and the Y-axis the output property (also brightness). The curves can be moved (pulled) with the mouse. "Up" increases the effect and "down" decreases the effect. An anchor point (black dot) is added to the curve wherever it is pulled, and this becomes a constraint for subsequent pulls: the curve will continue to go through this point as other parts of the curve are pulled. Anchor points can also be dragged. Delete an anchor point by right-clicking it.
 

Batch Editing

There are some batch functions in the Tools menu to speed some common tasks. You can select a number of image files and apply a batch function to all of them.

Batch functions can be used for the following tasks:
  + Rename files (using a base name and sequence number)
  + Convert file types (e.g. png to jpeg)
  + Resize files (e.g. reduce for web site upload)
  + Copy or move files to another location
  + Convert RAW files to tiff, png, or jpeg
  + Add or remove tags or add geotags


Here is an example workflow for the initial rotate and trim (crop) of a new batch of images:
  1. Copy the files from the camera memory card to a working directory.
  2. Open the first file.
  3. Menu > Image > Trim/Rotate.
  4. Turn the image if it needs leveling (drag the right edge).
  5. Trim the image by dragging the trim borders to suit.
  6. Press [Save] and choose "overwrite" or "new version" or "new file".
  7. Press [Next] to start the next file. Press [Next] again to skip if wanted.
  8. Repeat steps 4-7 for each image. The Trim/Rotate function remains open.


Managing Image Collections
You can use Fotoxx to manage a huge image collection and still be able to quickly find the images you want. Some effort by the user to organize the images is required. Search methods include directory and file names, image dates, image ratings, tags (labels for persons, places, objects, events ...), captions and comments, and geotags (location names and latitude/longitude). This is done in a standards-compliant manner so that data can be shared with other applications. Options for how to organize a large image collection can be found here.


Selecting Images from an Image Gallery Window
This procedure is used in several functions which operate on multiple image files (batch add or delete tags, batch convert images, manage collections, others). It is explained once here, and this topic is linked from each of the functions using this procedure.

The dialog box is used to select image files. Behind it is a gallery window for the current directory, collection, or search results. To select an image, click its thumbnail and the image file will be added to the list in the dialog. Other options are shown below. You can navigate the gallery window to other directories by clicking on the directory names at the top or clicking on thumbnails represending subdirectories. You can choose images from any gallery in any order. The list of image files can also be manipulated to change the sequence or remove images added by mistake. Click on a file in the list to show its thumbnail in the dialog and also set the current list position. The next image file added will be inserted at this position. If the [delete] button is pressed, the current list position will be deleted, and if the [insert] button is pressed, the last deleted image file will be inserted at the current position. The last 100 images deleted are saved and can be re-inserted anywhere: each use of the [insert] button removes one image from the saved list and inserts it at the current position. To move images to a new position in the list: click the image file (its thumbnail will be shown), click [delete]. Repeat to delete more images. Click an image file to set the insert position, then click [insert]. The first deleted image will be inserted before the selected image. Repeat to insert more images from the deleted list. The file list in the dialog can also be edited directly: you can use cut and paste to get the sequence you wish, but be careful to always cut and paste entire lines (files). The [add_all] button will add all the image files in the current image gallery. After using Search Images to establish a set of images, the gallery window will contain this set. You can select individual images from the gallery, or use [add all] and then delete unwanted images. A single image may also be added multiple times to the list.

Thumbnail click rules:
  + left click: add the image at the current list position
  + right click: remove the image from the list, if present
  + Shift + left click (first): set the starting image to add
  + Shift + left click (2nd): set the ending image and add all of them


Menu Shortcuts
The Fotoxx menus are large. You may need time to get used to them and remember where the functions are located. There are three shortcut methods available for frequently used functions:
 
 1   Right-click the main window or gallery window thumbnail:
A popup menu appears with some commonly used menu functions.
 2   keyboard shortcuts - these are documented in a table below.
You can also add your own shortcuts for menu functions you choose (KB shortcuts).
 3   Favorites menu - a toolbar button for a graphical popup menu. You can add text and/or icons that link to any menu functions you choose. You can arrange them in a layout window. You can leave this window open and access its functions with mouse clicks (favorites). 



Table of Contents - Menu Functions
  Favorites
User-designed graphic menu for quick access to frequent functions
File Menu File Management
 New Window Clone Fotoxx and open a new window slightly offset from the old one
 Open Image File File open dialog - open an image file to view or edit
 Open Previous File Go back to the last image file opened
 Recently Seen Images
Gallery of the most recent image files viewed or edited
 Newest Images
Gallery of the most recently added new image files
 Open RAW File (ufraw) Open a camera RAW file and edit with ufraw
 Save to Disk
Save modified image to disk file
 Rename Image File Rename image files, optionally add sequence numbers
 Create Blank Image Create a new blank image file
 Trash Image File Move an image file into the trash folder
 Print Image File Select printer / paper format / orientation and print image
 Quit Fotoxx Exit from Fotoxx.


Tools Menu Utilities and setup functions.
 Index Image Files Rebuild the image search index and refresh thumbnails
 User Settings A collection of user preferences and settings
 Keyboard Shortcuts Assign keyboard shortcut keys to menu functions
 Manage Collections Make named image collections, arrange the sequence, etc.
 Move Collections Update collections when image files have been moved
 Slide Show Show a series of images full screen (no menu or toolbar)
 Batch Convert
Rename / convert / resize / move / upright  images
 Batch Convert RAW
Convert RAW image files to jpeg, png, or tiff
 Brightness Histogram
Show brightness distribution graph of current image
 Grid Lines Add or remove grid lines for image alignment (warp, rotate)
 Show RGB Show RGB values at current mouse position and prior clicked positions
 Dark/Bright Pixels
Highlight the darkest and/or brightest pixels, with adjustable thresholds
 Monitor Color Display a color palette for tuning your monitor
 Monitor Gamma Adjust monitor gamma for better image viewing
 Change Language Change the GUI language
 Missing Translations
List missing translations to a popup window
 Menu and Launcher Add a system menu entry and desktop launcher
 Burn Images to CD/DVD Select images and write them to CD, DVD or BlueRay
 Resources Dump resource usage data to the log file


Metadata Menu View and edit metadata (data stored within image files)
 Tags Overview Explanation of tags and how they are used 
 Edit Metadata Add or change image date, rating, caption, comments, or tags (keywords)
 Batch Add/Remove Tags Add or remove multiple tags for multiple image files
 View Metadata (short) View most important image metadata
 View Metadata (long) View all available image metadata
 View Captions and Comments
View captions and comments only in a small popup window
 Edit Any Metadata Add or change any metadata
 Delete Metadata Delete specific metadata or all image metadata
 Show Captions on Images
Show metadata captions and comments at the top of images
 Geotags Overview General Information
 Download Geolocations Download city locations and a world map for use in geotag functions 
 Edit Geotags Add geotag data (city, latitude, longitude) to image EXIF data 
 Batch Add Geotags Add the same geotag data to multiple image files 
 Images by Location/Date Find images from selected country / city / date range
 Images by Map Location Click on a world map to get images at or near the selected location 
 Search Images Find images with any desired metadata or (partial) directory and file names


Area Menu Selected areas within images where edits are confined
 Overview Explanation of area selection and editing 
 Select Select an area for subsequent editing
 Show / Hide Show or hide an area outline 
 Enable / Disable Enable or disable an area for subsequent editing 
 Invert Invert an area 
 Unselect Unselect an area 
 Copy / Paste Copy an area to memory and paste it somewhere else 
 Open / Save Save an area to a file and load it later to use in other images 


Image Menu Functions that change image size, shape, content
 Rotate 90°
Turn an image 90° left or right, to upright the image
 Trim/Rotate Trim/crop image edges and/or rotate an image to level it 
 Auto-Trim Auto-select trim margins to remove after rotate, unbend, or warp functions 
 Resize Scale an image up or down (pixel dimensions) 
 Flip Mirror an image horizontally or vertically
 Add Text Write text on top of an image


Retouch Menu Functions to improve an image
 Voodoo Enhance Automatic image enhancement
 Retouch Combo
Edit brightness, contrast, color, saturation, white balance
 Tone Mapping Increase local contrast to to enhance details
 Brightness Distribution
Flatten or expand the brightness distribution
 Brightness Ramp Vary brightness across the image using horizontal and vertical curves
 Paint Edits Apply an edit function gradually by "painting" with the mouse


Repair Menu Functions to correct problems in an image
 Sharpen Sharpen a blurred image
 Blur Blur an image (e.g. smoothen skin)
 Reduce Noise Reduce noise (speckles) in low-light images
 Smart Erase Remove power lines and other spoilers from an image
 Red Eyes Remove red eyes from flash photos
 Paint/Clone Paint pixels or areas with color or with other parts of the image
 Remove Dust Remove dust spots on images made from scanned slides
 Anti-alias Tool
Reduce jagged lines or edges in low-resolution images
 Fix Color Fringes Reduce chromatic aberration
 Fix Stuck Pixels Fix stuck pixels (always bright or dark) from camera sensor defects


Color Menu Functions to improve or correct color
 Shift Colors Shift RGB colors relative to each-other
 Color Mode Make a black-white or color negative, or positive from negative, or sepia
 Color Profile Convert an image profile, e.g. sRGB <> Adobe RGB
 Match Colors Match the colors in one image to those in another image
 Revise RGB Make complex color corrections that vary over the image
 CMYK
Change brightness, color, contrast using CMYK colors


Bend Menu Funtions that bend or warp an image
 Unbend Fix perspective problems
 Keystone Correction Straighten a photo made from an offset angle
 Flatten Book Page Flatten/straighten a photographed page from a book
 Warp area Distort image within an area by pulling with the mouse
 Warp curved Distort entire image by pulling with the mouse
 Warp linear Distort entire image by pulling with the mouse
 Warp affine Distort entire image by pulling with the mouse


Effects Menu Functions that make artful transformations
 Color Depth Reduce color depth (posterize) 
 Sketch
Transform a photo into a pencil sketch
 Drawing
Transform a photo into a line drawing 
 Graduated Blur
Blur pixels according to contrast
 Embossing Transform a photo into a simulated embossing 
 Tiles Transform a photo into tiles (pixelate image) 
 Dots Transform a photo into an array of dots 
 Painting Transform a photo into a simulated painting 
 Vignette Change brightness or color in a radial pattern
 Texture
Add textured surfaces to an image
 Pattern
Add a background pattern to an image
 Mosaic
Transform an image into a mosaic using tiles made from all images


Combine Menu Functions that combine multiple images
 High Dynamic Range Make a high dynamic range image from multiple images 
 High Depth of Field Make a high depth of field image from multiple images 
 Stack / Paint Combine multiple images to remove tourists and cars 
 Stack / Noise Combine multiple images to reduce noise 
 Panorama Join 2-4 overlapping images horizontally 
 Vertical Panorama Join 2-4 overlapping images vertically
 Mashup
Arrange multiple images and text on a layout


Plugins Menu Use other image edit programs as edit functions in Fotoxx
Help Menu User guide, README, change log 


Toolbar Buttons - Tab F (image window)

 Color Change the color of the mouse "brush" and selected image areas
 Undo / Redo Undo / Redo one edit at a time (up 99 edits)
 Shift + Undo / Redo Changes the buttons to [undo all] and [redo all].
 Sync.G
Set the gallery to the directory of the image in Tab F (navigation)
 Open File open dialog - open an image file to view or edit
 Prev / Next Go to previous or next image in the current gallery
 Save
Save (modified) image to disk file (same, new version, new file)  
 Trash Move an image file into the trash folder


Toolbar Buttons - Tab G (gallery window)
 
 Sync.G
Set the gallery to the directory of the image in Tab F (navigation)
 Open open another directory for a new image gallery window
 GoTo open a list of bookmarks, select one and go there
 Zoom+ use larger thumbnails
 Zoom- use smaller thumbnails or no thumbnails (show file names only)
 First go to the top of the gallery (the first image files)
 Last go to the last page in the gallery
 Page up go up (back) one page
 Page down do down (forward) one page
 Row up go up one row
 Row down go down one row
 Sort sort gallery files by name, mod date/time, photo date/time (EXIF)



Right-Click Popup Menus
These menus appear when the main window or a gallery thumbnail is right-clicked with the mouse.
These are present for convenience and duplicate functions found in the main menus.
 
Menu main gallery description
 Metadata
  x
  x
short image metadata report
 Rename   x   x rename an image file without changing the directory 
 Copy to   x   x copy an image file to another directory (create a duplicate)
 Move to   x   x move an image file to another directory (remove from present directory)
 Delete   x   x delete an image file (cannot be reversed)
 Trash   x   x move an image file to the trash folder (can be reversed) 
 Trim/Rotate 
  x  
trim (crop) an image file and/or rotate to level 
 Resize   x  
change the image size (pixel dimensions)
 Rotate 90°
  x   x
rotate the image +/- 90 degrees to upgright
 Voodoo Enhance   x  
fast automatic enhancement that may be OK 
 Retouch Combo   x  
adjust brightness, contrast, color, saturation, white balance  
 Brightness Distribution
  x  
flatten or expand the brightness distribution
 Tone Mapping   x  
tone map the image (enhance low-contrast details) 
 Red Eyes   x  
remove red eyes from flash photos 
 Grid Lines   x  
add or change grid lines 
 Select Area   x  
select image areas for localized edits 
 Copy to Clipboard   x   x copy image to clipboard for paste by another application


Keyboard Shortcuts
Keyboard shortcuts are available for some functions. The notation Alt+G means press and hold the Alt key, then press the G key. The following shortcuts (down to F1) are fixed and cannot be changed, and the rest are changeable (see KB shortcuts).
  
Main Window (Tab F) Fixed shortcuts
 left / right arrow keys Previous / next image
 + or =  /  - keys Zoom image bigger / smaller
 F / G / W  keys Open corresponding window Tab F / G / W
 Z Toggle: zoom image to 100% / fit image in window
 Escape key Exit slide show mode, exit a dialog.
 Space Bar Pause and resume slide show
 F1 function key Show user guide for current or prior menu function
 F11 function key Toggle main window to full-screen (no menu/toolbar) and back


Gallery window (Tab G) Fixed shortcuts
 Home / End keys move to first / last page of image gallery
 Page Up / Down keys move to previous / next page of image gallery
 up / down arrow keys move up / down by one row of image gallery
 left / right arrow keys move to previous / next page of image gallery
 + or =  /  -  keys bigger / smaller thumbnail size


Default Shortcuts These can be changed using Tools > Keyboard Shortcuts
 F1 function key display user guide for current function
 N Rename Image File
 K Keyboard Shortcuts - edit
 Alt+G Grid Lines on/off
 T Trim/Rotate Image
 V Voodoo Enhance
 R Retouch Combo
 Alt+U Undo
 Alt+R Redo
 Alt+P
Open Previous File


Mouse Functions
 left click Zoom-in: magnify image, center at click position
 right click Zoom-out: restore image to window size. If no zoom, popup menu with common functions.
 mouse wheel Zoom in and out depending on wheel direction
 left drag on image Pan/scroll zoomed image, same direction or magnified opposite direction (like scroll bars)




Favorites (F-tab heart icon)

This is a graphic menu in a popup window which you can populate with your frequently used functions and arrange them on the window using the mouse. The initial popup window (left image) is blank. Right click an empty space on the window to define a new menu entry. Right click an existing entry to modify it. Use the resulting dialog (right image) to define or change the menu entry.
 
   menu text text for the popup menu - optional if a menu icon is used
   menu func the Fotoxx function to use - the exact menu name
   menu icon menu icon - /directory.../filename.png - optional if a menu text is used
   icon size if icon is used, its size from 24x24 to 64x64 pixels
   close window checkbox: close the popup window when this menu is selected

Left drag a menu entry to move it somewhere else on the popup window. The popup window can be resized to fit the contained menu entries. Left click a menu entry to select the menu. If "close window" was checked, the popup window will close. All menu settings and icon files are saved in a configuration file whenever the popup window is closed. The configuration file and saved icons are located in the directory  /home/<user>/.fotoxx/favorites. The configuration file can be edited directly - at your own risk. You can use either the English menu names or their translations for your locale. The menu names must exactly match the Fotoxx menus, but case is not significant. The menu text may include "\n" to represent a newline character.

Icon library: Icons for all image edit functions can be found here:
  /usr/share/fotoxx/icons/edit-funcs




File Menu


New Window
Start a new instance of Fotoxx in a new window, slightly offset for visibility. This is useful to compare images or to work with more than one image at a time. Both windows can be used to edit images. The new window will initially have an unmodified version of the current image file. If the same image file is edited in both windows, the final result is the file saved last.


Open Image File  or toolbar button [Open]
This function starts a standard file open dialog, allowing you to select an image file or navigate to another directory and select an image file. The selected file is opened in the Fotoxx main window where you can view or edit the image file using the menus and toolbar buttons. The main window title bar always shows the file name and directory of the current image file. Drag and drop can also be used to open a file: drag an image file from Nautilus (or other source) to the Fotoxx window, and Fotoxx will open the file. If text is dragged from gedit (or other program with drag sourcing), Fotoxx will assume the text is a filespec and try to open it. Thus you can make a list of filespecs in a text file and use this list with Fotoxx. Effectively, you can use Nautilus or text files to navigate a collection of images as an alternative to the Fotoxx navigation system.

Camera RAW files can also be opened. This may need a few seconds depending on file size and processor speed.  You can proceed to edit the RAW file like any other image file. RAW files are also included in thumbnail galleries, as long as a .jpeg thumbnail image can be extracted from the RAW file (normally true). When saving a RAW file, you must specify a type TIFF or PNG (8 or 16 bit color), or JPEG (8 bit).


Open Previous File
Go back to the previously opened image file, also if this is in a different directory. This differs from the toolbar button [Prev] which goes to the previous image file in the current gallery (directory, search results, collection).


Recently Seen Images
The 100 most recently seen image files (viewed or edited) are shown in a gallery, from which you can select a file to open.


Newest Images
The 200 most recently added new image files (from Index Image Files), are shown in a gallery, from which you can select a file to open.


Open RAW File (ufraw)
Select and open a RAW camera file. The ufraw program is started. You can make adjustments to the RAW file such as color temperature, white balance, brightness, color, noise, etc. from the ufraw GUI. When the file is saved, a TIFF file is created with 16-bit color depth. This file is now opened in Fotoxx and can be further edited, saved as JPEG, etc. The RAW file type (file extension) must be included in the list of known RAW file types in Tools > User Settings. Ultimately the RAW file type must be one that is supported by ufraw and dcraw.


Save to Disk  or toolbar button [Save]

In the first dialog, select one of the three options: new version, new file name, or replace file.

Replace: Save the current image file back to itself. If a JPEG file, the default quality is used (this value can be set in User Settings).

New Version: Save the current image file with a new version number. File names with version numbers are formatted "filename.vNN.ext" where NN is a version number 01 to 99.  The 4 characters .vNN are inserted between the file name and extension. If the file name has no versions, version .v01 will be created. If file versions are already present on disk, then the next higher version number is used. There is no dialog or confirmation. If the file is a JPEG file, the default quality is used (this value can be set in User Settings).

New File: The 2nd dialog opens to save the current image file to a selected file, which can be the original file, another existing file, or a new file. An edited image file can be saved in formats JPEG, PNG, BMP and TIFF. BMP is normally not recommended for photos (does not support metadata). JPEG is normally the best option, since these are compressed to reduce space. You can choose a JPEG quality value in the range 1-100. Lower values give smaller files and less image quality. Values above 70 are generally hard to distinguish from 100 (highest quality, largest file size). PNG files are compressed without any loss of quality and are larger than JPEG files of the highest quality. TIFF files are uncompressed and larger than JPEG or PNG. TIFF and PNG files may be saved with 8 or 16 bits per color. The 16-bit formats only makes sense for files converted from a RAW format having more than 8 bits per color (camera RAW files are typically 10-12 bits with noise beyond that). It is rare that the difference between 8 and 16 bits per color can be seen with the eye. However, an image with higher bits has more latitude when the brightness distribution is altered with a program like Fotoxx. PNG-16 files are smaller than TIFF-16 but slower to save due to the compression process. Saving a file as TIFF or PNG can be quite slow, especially with a weak computer.

If make current is checked, the newly saved file will become the current file. In either case, the edit history is retained (i.e. undo and redo will still work).

File sizes for a 10 megapixel image are roughly as follows (depending on image detail).
The jpeg numbers are the quality value given when the file is saved to disk.
tiff-16 tiff-8 png-16 png-8 jpeg-100 jpeg-90 jpeg-80 jpeg-70
70 MB 35 MB 23 MB 17 MB 8 MB 3 MB 2 MB 1 MB

The default JPEG quality is used unless you change the value in the save-as dialog.
The default value is a User Settings option, and is initially set at 90.

The Technical Notes section describes potential loss of image quality from repeated edit and save of JPEG images. At the default quality of 90 this can be generally ignored.


Rename Image File

This function can help automate the process of renaming a series of image files using a root name (e.g. an event or place name) and a sequence number. Open the first image file in the series, input a new name, and press the [apply] button. Use the toolbar [next] button to move to the next file if wanted. You can use the same name again by pressing the [previous name] button and then add a suffix or sequence number. If you are using sequence numbers, press the [add 1] button to increment the sequence number.


Create Blank Image
Create a blank image with specified pixel dimensions and color. This can be used as a background for cutouts taken from other images (via Select Area) and annotation text (via Add Text). Input a file name, choose a background color, and set the desired pixel dimensions. See also the Mashup function.


Trash Image File
Fotoxx uses the Linux desktop standard for trash. If this works, trashed image files go into the standard trash location and can be recovered later if wanted. Otherwise, Fotoxx puts trashed images into a desktop directory named "fotoxx-trash". You can delete it or move it to your Linux-specific trash. If standard trash does not work, you may be able to fix this yourself. See the technical note about this. If both standard and desktop trash do not work (some distros are like this), you are given the option to delete the image file.


Print Image File

The print menu brings up a standard Page Setup dialog where you can select a printer, a paper size (letter, A4, etc.), and orientation (portrait or landscape). Select your printer (do not use a default setting). The paper size shown will be the one last set in the Printer Properties dialog (a separate admin function in the System menu). If the paper size is wrong, fix it using the Printer Properties dialog. Changing the paper in the Page Setup dialog may be ignored or lead to a "paper mismatch" failure. After using the [apply] button, another dialog starts for entering paper margins and an image scale. The margins can be used to shrink the image or shift it on the page. Image scale can be set in the range 5-100%, where 100% means print the maximum size image that fits within the margins. Smaller values will shrink the image proportionally. The actual print size (image width and height in centimeters) is updated in the dialog as margins and scale are changed, and this can be used to reach a desired printed image size. After the margins dialog, a Print dialog starts for the actual printing. This includes paper type and qality inputs, and a preview of the printed layout which can be accepted or rejected.



Tools Menu


Color (toolbar button)
This button toggles the foreground color among white, black, red, and green. The foreground color is used for the selection circle around the mouse pointer and for outlining currently selected image areas. Use the button to optimize visibility against the background image.


Index Image Files

This is needed when Fotoxx is started for the first time, when you add new image files to your collection, or if you move or rename image files or their directories. Nothing is lost when image files are moved, but the gallery windows may be slow, and the search functions will not find the new or moved files. The Index Image Files function will create missing thumbnails, replace outdated ones, and refresh the search index file using current data from your image files. This may need significant time if you have many thousands of images and/or a weak computer. A strong computer can process 1500+ images per minute ("strong computer" means a 2+ GHz multi-core CPU with a 7200 rpm disk).

Image files created (i.e. edited and saved) or moved within Fotoxx are taken care of automatically. Index Image Files is only needed when new image files are created from outside Fotoxx (e.g. a new batch of photos is added), or if files are moved or renamed from outside Fotoxx.

Index Image Files starts automatically at Fotoxx startup. It can also be started manually from the Tools menu. Unless there are hundreds of new images to process, this will be done in a few seconds.

Enter your top image directories (e.g. /home/<user>/Photos). Enter the directory paths directly in the window, or use the [browse] button to locate and add directories. These directories and any subdirectories containing images will be processed. It does not matter if other files are mixed with the images. The simplest way is to use /home/<user> as the only top directory, but it is better to separate the image files from the hundreds of thousands of other files that may be under /home/<user>.

Enter the thumbnails directory where thumbnail files will be stored. Use the supplied default or set your own location. The directory name must end with .../thumbnails, and this will be added to your selection if needed. If the lowest directory level (/thumbnails) is not present, it is created.

If you have used directory and/or file names to classify your images, you can make immediate use of these in the Search Images function. If you have saved captions, tags, geotags, titles, or ratings in your images (using Photoshop or other tools), these will also be searchable. After the images have been indexed with Index Image Files, searching them (by caption, comments, file name, tags, geotags, date, rating) is almost instantaneous. See Search Images.

Index Image Files logs progress messages to a popup dialog window. Each directory containing images is logged, but not each image file.


User Settings
Various user preferences and settings are collected in this dialog.

 Startup Display  Determines the initial window content when Fotoxx is started.
Recent Files: the most recently viewed or edited image files (gallery display).
Newest Files: image files most recently added to the Fotoxx database (gallery).
Previous Gallery: the directory of the last image viewed (gallery).
Previous Image: show the last image viewed.
Blank Window: start with no image in Tab F and the top image directory in Tab G.
Directory Gallery: the given top image directory or sub-subdirectory underneath.
Image File: the given image file.
 Menu Style Classic: at the top of the window. Vertical: vertical on the left side of the window. The toolbar is under the menu. Vertical is more space efficient for most monitors.
 Toolbar Style The toolbar style for both windows, image (Tab F) and gallery (Tab G).
 Image Pan
 (zoomed image)
Drag: image moves with the dragged mouse.
Scroll: image moves against the dragged mouse (like invisible scroll bars),
Magnified: movement is magnified: multiple drags for large movement are not needed.
 Interpolation
The algorithm used to display an image at sizes other than 1x.
 tiles: no interpolation: you can see the true image pixels if viewed at 2x or 4x.
 bilinear: "jagged edges" are removed without loss of detail. RECOMMENDED.
 hyperbolic: supposedly better than bilinear, but not much. VERY SLOW - not recommended.
 JPEG quality The default quality value when saving an image as a jpeg file type.
 Zooms for 200%
The image size increase with each zoom. Choose 1, 2, or 3 zooms for each 2x increase in size.
 RAW command The command used to convert camera RAW files to tiff-16. This can be changed if you need.
 RAW file types The RAW file types recognized. If your camera uses something else, add it to the list and this may work. You can also shorten the list to those file types you actually use.

See the user documentation for dcraw if you want to adjust how RAW conversion works. The parameters chosen are used for both File > Open Image File and Tools > Batch Convert RAW files. The menu File > Open RAW File (ufraw) has no parameters since all settings can be made from the ufraw GUI.

Changing the menu style or toolbar style will be effective the next time Fotoxx is started.
Interpolation affects only how images are displayed. It has no effect on images saved to a file.


Bookmarks
Assign names ("bookmarks") to chosen gallery locations (directory and image file), keep the names in a list, and use the list to select a name and go instantly to the associated gallery and image position in the gallery. There are two parts: an edit dialog to build the list of bookmarks, and a toolbar button [GoTo] on Tab G to show the bookmarks and select a location to go to. To assign new bookmarks, press the [GoTo] button on Tab G and then select [Edit Bookmarks] in the dialog that follows. The Edit Bookmarks dialog is started. Click on a gallery thumbnail to add this location to the bookmark list. The assigned bookmark name will default to the file name. This shows up in an input field which you can edit to assign a better name. If you select an existing bookmark with a mouse click, its name is shown in the input field. You can change the name or press [delete] to remove the bookmark. New bookmarks are inserted at the last bookmark location selected. To go to a bookmark, press the [GoTo] button on the Tab G toolbar. The list of bookmarks is shown. Click on an entry to go there.


Keyboard Shortcuts

This function is used to view or change custom keyboard shortcuts. The currently assigned shortcuts are shown in the window. Enter a new shortcut using the keyboard. You can use the keys A-Z, 0-9, F2-F9, and most of the symbols (# $ & ^ < etc.). You can combine a key with Ctrl, Alt or Shift: Press and hold Ctrl, Alt or Shift, then press the key, then release both. Select one of the available menu assignments from the drop-down list. To remove a shortcut, select it and press [Delete]. If you press [cancel] or [x] all changes will be discarded. The shortcuts shown in the tables above are reserved and changing them is blocked.
 

Manage Collections - Concepts
An image collection is an arbitrary collection of images that is manually assembled from other images. This is one method to make groups of associated images (other methods are tags, geotags, captions and comments, directory and file names). An image collection is simply a list of the member image files. The image files themselves are not copied or changed. A given image can be a member of multiple collections, or may be present more than once in a collection. Collections can be used to group images with some shared characteristics, such as photos from a vacation trip, photos of a given person taken at different times or events, a "best photos" collection, etc. Once a collection is made, you can call it up by name and it becomes a gallery. You can add and remove images in a collection and rearrange the order of the images.

Image Cache
This is an intermediate storage area used to hold selected images for later insertion into a collection. In general, you select image files from gallery windows and add them to the cache, then you make a new collection with images from the cache, or you add the cached images to an existing collection at a chosen position within the collection.

Manage Collections Dialog

The Manage Collections dialog has five buttons:
New: Start a new collection. After you specify a collection name, the standard dialog for selecting images from gallery windows is started (link). Navigate to desired directories/galleries and select the initial images for the collection. When the dialog is closed via [Done], the collection is saved and can be further edited as described below.
Make: Make a new collection using the images in the current gallery. Use this after using Search Images to establish a gallery of selected images.
Choose: Choose a collection for viewing or editing. The gallery window will show its current images. You can now use the popup menus (below) to rearrange images or delete them. To add new images, press [Images].
Images: Add images to the image cache using the standard dialog for selecting images from gallery windows (link). This dialog remains open while you navigate to other directories to select images. Select image files in any order from any directory. You can also use Metadata > Search Images to create a gallery from which images can be selected, or choose a collection to view and select images. When the dialog is closed via [Done], the selected images are added to the image cache. From there the images can be added to a collection using the popup menus (below).
Clear: Clear the image cache.
Delete: Select an existing collection to delete. The collection is deleted, not the images.
 
Right-click Popup Menus
Gallery thumbnails from any gallery have a right-click popup menu which includes the following entry:
    Copy to Image Cache - add the clicked image to the image cache.
Thumbnails in a collection gallery also have the following popup menu entries:
    Remove from Collection - remove the image from the collection
    Cut to Image Cache - remove the image and add it to the image cache
    Paste Image Cache Here (clear) - insert cached images, clear the image cache
    Paste Image Cache Here (keep) - insert cached images, keep the image cache

Images can be copied to the image cache by right-clicking their thumbnails and selecting the Copy menu. These can be later inserted (pasted) into a collection by right-clicking a thumbnail position and selecting one of the Paste menus. Click roughly between two thumbnails and the images are inserted between them. Choose the Paste/clear menu to clear the cache after the images are inserted, or choose the Paste/keep menu if you plan to insert the same image(s) somewhere else in the collection or into another collection.

Summary

Move Collections

If image directories are renamed, you need to perform two steps to keep Fotoxx working properly. Run the function Index Image Files to update thumbnails and the search index. If any of the affected images are members of collections, the collections must also be updated. In the Move Collections dialog, select a collection (or "all collections") and input the old and new directories, or at least the parts that changed:
    example:   old:  /home/<user>/pictures/Rome    new:  /home/<user>/pictures/Italy
    or more simply:   old:  /Rome    new:  /Italy
The function screens all image files in the collection. If the 'old' string is found within a file path, the 'new' string is substituted. If a single collection is selected, the list of revised file names is shown and you can accept or reject the changes. If "all collections" is selected, processing proceeds automatically, so be sure of your inputs.

Warning: This method does not work if only some files in a directory are moved and others are left in place. There is no option other than manually adding the moved files back into the collection.


Slide Show
With this function you can show a pre-selected sequence of images in full-screen mode.

Slide Show Select: Use the Manage Collections function to assemble the images for a slide show as a collection with an assigned name. This allows you to collect images from anywhere in your image database and order them as desired. When a slide show is started, select the collection name to be used. If the collection includes images with multiple versions, you can show all the versions or only the last version, depending on the 'last versions' checkbox.

Pause List Select: You can optionally select another collection for images that will be automatically paused in the slide show. The show stops at these images, plays a tone, and waits for the user to continue by pressing the space bar. This is for making speeches at selected images. If you make the slide show collection first, you can select images from that collection for the pause list collection. The pause list collection can also be more general, containing images that appear in different slide show collections. To cancel a pause list, use the [Select] button and then cancel the file selection dialog that follows.

Transitions: There are a number of transition types that can be used between images. Transition modes include instant replacement, fade-out / fade-in, and many animated methods of image replacement (e.g. the new image expands from the center to replace the old image). Press the [transitions] button to get the second dialog. Here you can select the transitions to be used and whether they are used randomly or in sequence. The slowdown parameters can be used to slow selected transitions that may operate too fast on some computers (and some may be too slow on slow computers, but this cannot be helped). The preference parameters specify a relative preference which will influence how frequently the transition type is used when random sequence is selected. The random method avoids using a transition that was used shortly before, and will only work if 5 or more transition types are selected. The arrow keys can always be used at any time during the show to go back or forward immediately.

Seconds: The time each image is shown. The spacebar can be used to pause and resume the timer between slides. The B-key can be used to blank the screen and pause the show. Press again to restore the last image, or press the space bar to resume with the next image. You can interrupt the slide show by pressing the G-key (gallery). Navigate elsewhere if needed, click on an image, and the slide show will resume from that image (if the image is in the slide show collection). This allows you to skip around more easily than stopping and starting the show each time.

Clip Limit: Images are scaled to fit the window. If the image and window aspect ratios are different, this will create black margins above and below, or left and right of the image. You can optionally make the images expand to fill these margins and cut off the opposite sides of the image (e.g. if the margins are on the left and right, the image is expanded to fill these margins and cut off the top and bottom equally). You control how much of this is allowed with the Clip Limit, which is the percent difference in aspect ratios below which expansion and clipping will be done. Zero means no clipping is done, 10% means that images with 10% or less difference in aspect ratio will be expanded and clipped.

Show Captions: If selected, metadata captions and comments are shown above each image.

Use the escape key or F11 to get out of slide show mode.


Batch Convert Files
This function is used to rename, convert, resize and move multiple image files at once.


Select Files
Select files to convert from a gallery window (link).
New Name
Optional new name with # characters to be replaced with sequence numbers.
base, adder
Starting sequence number and adder for each output file.
New Location
Optional new directory location for the converted files.
new file type
File type for converted images, or "no change".
max. width, height
Output images will fit within these dimensions (ratio is not changed).
delete originals
Delete the input files after successful conversion.
copy metadata
Copy all EXIF and IPTC metadata to the output files.
upright
If an image is rotated 90°, upright it (direction known from EXIF).
sharpen
Apply slight sharpening to all output images.

When input and output file names are the same, delete originals is ignored.
If an output file already exists, the input file is not converted.

Upload Photos to a Website
Most photo websites have the ability to upload multiple image files from a single directory, using only a web browser. Use the above Fotoxx function to select, resize, and export image files to the desktop or any other directory. From there, use the photo website's native browser interface to upload the image files.


Batch Convert RAW Files

This function converts selected RAW image files to JPEG, PNG-8, PNG-16, TIFF-8 or TIFF-16 format, using the program Dcraw. The PNG and TIFF formats have either 8 or 16 bits per color. RAW files generally have 10-12 bits per color, and noise beyond that. Therefore use a 16 bit format to keep all of the data available in a RAW file. The difference between 8 and 16 bit color is rarely visible, but a higher color depth provides a greater margin for retouch functions that can radically shift the brightness distribution, causing a problem known as "color banding". Use the [Select Files] button to choose one or more RAW image files from a gallery window (link). Choose one of the output formats. Choose the parameters for the program Dcraw - the dialog buttons are used to configure the Dcraw command shown below. The defaults should work fine. The image files are converted one at a time and displayed in the main window. Depending on the number of files, this can take a long time (a strong PC does about 60 files per minute for most RAW file types and TIFF-16 output). PNG-16 produces much smaller files than TIFF-16 because the files are compressed (with no data loss). This also needs more time to do the compression work. The parameters for dcraw are documented in the dcraw man page (command: $ man dcraw).


Brightness Histogram
This function opens a small window that shows a brightness distribution graph of the current image in the main window, or the currently selected area of the image. This graph updates immediately for new images or as edit functions change the image. There are four graphs in four colors: red, green, blue graphs are for the respective colors. The black graph is for overall brightness which is labeled "white". Use the buttons [Red] [Green] [Blue] and [White] to select the colors to show. White means all colors added together.


Grid Lines

This function adds or removes horizontal and vertical lines across the image. The lines are useful when an image must be rotated for horizon alignment, or when an image is unbent or warped to straighten walls or other objects in the image. The settings for x- and y-spacing control the spacing (pixels) between the lines. If the controls for x- and y-count are NOT zero, then the x- and y-spacing values are ignored and the number of lines will be set to these counts. Example: set x- and y-count to 2 lines each in order to divide the image into thirds horizontally and vertically. The x- and y-grid checkboxes can be used to enable and disable the vertical and horizontal lines separately. The keyboard shortcut Alt+G can be used to toggle the grid lines on and off (this shortcut can be changed). If an image is printed with grid lines enabled, the grid lines are also printed. The x- and y-offset controls can be used to shift the grid lines to intersect a desired point in the image.

Several edit functions have a button [grid] which starts this same dialog. The resulting grid line settings are specific to that function only, and will be restored whenever that function is in use.


Show RGB
When a point on the image is clicked, the RGB values are shown in a dialog window. The values have the format xxx.dd, where xxx is the upper 8 bits of the color value and .dd is the lower 8 bits. The range is 0.00 to 255.99. The lower 8 bits are zero unless the image is being edited or the image is a 16-bit TIFF or PNG file. EV (exposure value) is an alternative unit, useful for precise color adjustment. EV is zero for mid-brightness (128). The outputs are updated immediately if the image is being edited. The last nine points clicked are shown. The points are labeled on the image corresponding to the letters A-I in the dialog window. If "delta" is checked and the image is being edited, then the changes are shown instead of the absolute values. If no edit is active, "delta" does nothing.

  RGB 0 1 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256
  EV nan -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1


Dark / Bright Pixels
This function is used to highlight the darkest and/or the brightest pixels in an image. Adjust the two sliders to set the brightness thresholds, which are initially 0 for dark pixels and 255 for bright pixels. Pixels with a brightness less than the dark threshold or greater than the bright threshold are highlighted on the image. The image responds quickly to changes in the sliders. You can use this function in parallel with edit functions to control edit results.


Monitor Color

Eight color bands are written across the screen with brightness from zero (black) to 100%. You can use this to adjust the brightness of your monitor. The left end of each stripe should be as black as possible, but you should start to see some color within a few mm from the left edge. If the completely black portion is wider than this, adjust the monitor. There are 255 brightness steps from black to 100% (8 bits per color). The steps are too small to distinguish with the eye. This evaluation should be done in a darkened room (with little external light falling on the monitor).


Monitor Gamma

Gamma determines how RGB brightness values (0-255) are converted into brightness on the monitor. The standard value is 2.2 and this should normally be used for image editing. The adjustment chart above is provided. Adjust the dialog slider until the middle band has the same brightness as the upper and lower bands at scale location 2.2. The chart only works at 100% size, so do not zoom the chart. The command line utility "xgamma" is required (normally it is present). The chart image originates from Norman Koren.


Change Language
This function allows you to change the GUI to one of the available languages. If your language is not available or has missing translations, consider making a translation, which is not difficult (technical notes).


Missing Translations
This function lists all missing translations to a popup window. Translations left as English are not reported, since this is often deliberate, e.g. words like "font" or "icon" may be the same in both languages.


Menu and Launcher
This function puts a Fotoxx icon / launcher on the desktop and adds Fotoxx to the desktop menu system under the category "Graphics". Your system must be LSB compliant (Linux Standards Base). The effectiveness of this has been sporadic. You may need to log off and back on to see the new menu entry. A dialog allows you to customize the startup options.


Burn Images to CD/DVD
This function enables you to choose image files and burn them into a CD or DVD or BlueRay disc. When the function starts, an image gallery window is displayed from which you can select the image files to burn (link). When done, the list of image files is sent to Brasero to burn the disc.


Resources
This is a diagnostic tool to measure CPU time and detect memory leaks. The data is dumped to the log file (stdout), which is visible when you start Fotoxx from a terminal window. The CPU time is the total process time (including all threads and child processes) since the previous resources dump.  



Metadata Menu

Metadata means text data that is stored inside an image file. Digital cameras automatically create some data automatically, such as date and time, technical data about the camera and image, and location data (if the camera has a GPS receiver). Other data can be added by the user, such as captions, comments, ratings, and tags (keywords that can be used to search images, e.g. persons, places, things, events).

The program exiftool must be installed for the metadata functions to work. Fotoxx uses this program to read and write metadata. If exiftool is not installed, then modifying an image with Fotoxx will lose all metadata. For recent Ubuntu, the package name is: libimage-exiftool-perl. Other distros may be different.

There are several alternatives for organizing a large image collection so that it can be easily searched. It would be good to review these before choosing a system.


Tags Overview
Image files can have classification tags (categories, keywords) assigned to them. These can be used to search a large image collection for those images having desired tags. Typical tags: the main subject of a photo, the associated event, the location, the persons or things contained, etc. Tags reside inside the image metadata (IPTC:keywords). Tags are normally one word, but a short phrase with imbedded blanks or other delimiters can be used. Commas and semicolons are recognized internally as delimiters (separators) between tags, and therefore cannot be used within a tag. A compound tag like "arizona scenery" is allowed, but you should use two tags instead for more flexibility: you can search for images having either tag or both tags.

You can use a directory hierarchy to make a physical organization of your images, e.g. directory names corresponding to year or location or other scheme. You can use file names for the main subject of the image. Such physical organizations are useful but optional: you can also put all your images in one giant directory and keep the meaningless file names that come out of the camera. Regardless of the physical organization, tags can be used to create other organizations, e.g. to label all the images of a person over all years, events, locations, etc. All images having a desired tag or tags can be found quickly and displayed in an image gallery window, where you can further review the images and choose those for viewing, editing, or changing their tags. If you have used directory and file names in a meaningful way, you can keep using these, and you can also search for images using these names as well as tags. There is no need to duplicate information already available. See "Search Images" below.

Images may have a date (date of photo) which is pulled from the image EXIF data if present, or manually set. Images may have a "star rating" for the importance or quality of an image. Dates and star ratings can also be used as search criteria.

Limitations and Practical Tips
The following are the default limits for tags. These are compile time constants which can be easily increased if needed, although I believe they are large enough to exceed practical limits:
 +  max. tag length: 50 characters per tag
 +  max. tags for one image file: 1000 characters
 +  max. tags in a tag category: 50000 characters
 +  max. unique tags overall: 50000 characters

The practical limit for the overall number of tags is in the range 200-500. Exceeding this range is possible but will lead to some practical problems: The window showing available tags will be large and tags will become harder to find (although sorted by category and within category), and the point and click method of adding tags will become more cumbersome. If tags are broadly defined and fewer in number, the search results will be larger, but using the search results (image gallery window) to find a smaller set of images is still quite fast. Physical file organization is also preserved: image files located together in their directories will also appear together in search results. All in all, my recommendation for the casual photographer is to use fewer and broader tags.


Edit Metadata

The function Metadata > Edit Metadata is used to edit the most frequently used metadata: image date, rating, caption, comments, and tags. The dialog initially shows existing data for the current image. After making additions or changes, press [Apply] to update the image file.

Existing tags are shown in "image tags". Available tags are shown in the "defined tags" window below. One of these tags can be added to the image by clicking with the mouse. A tag can be deleted from the image by clicking it within "image tags". Tags recently added are shown in "recent tags". This is a convenience to make adding tags to a new batch of images easier, assuming that many of the same tags will be used repeatedly. Point and click the same way. The date of the image, if available, is shown as "image date". This may be entered if missing, or changed. You can enter a full date in the format yyyy-mm-dd or a shorter format yyyy or yyyy-mm. A missing month/day is logically equivalent to 01/01 when used as a low limit for searching, or 12/31 when used as a high limit. The [get prev] button fills-in the date from the previous data entered. This is to allow easy dating of a series of images. If time is important, you can include a time using the format hh:mm ( :ss is optional). You may enter an optional "stars" rating for the image. The dialog remains open if you navigate to a new image, and the data is updated from that image. The [Apply] button writes the data to the image file and to the search index file used for searching images.

Manage Tags
This dialog starts from the button [manage tags] in the Edit Metadata dialog. You can also assign categories to tags to help organize them and locate them more quickly when adding tags to images. They are optional and they play no role in tag assignment or searching: only the tag is stored in an image, not its category. Typical categories are people, places, things, events, scenery, buildings, art, etc. To add a new tag with a new category, enter the category and the tag, then click [create]. The category can be left blank and the tag will be assigned to "nocatg". To assign a tag to a different category, click a category (bold text) or enter a new one, click the tag, and press [create]. The tag will move from the old to the new category. To delete a tag, click the tag and press [delete]. Tags used in images but not assigned to a category will appear under "nocatg".

Note: a newly created tag is appended to the end of the tag list for its category. The next time fotoxx is started, all categories and their tag lists are sorted alphabetically, except that "nocatg" is always last.

Use the [orphan tags] button to list tags that are defined but not assigned to any images. These may be deleted if no use is planned.


Batch Tags
When adding tags to a large number of images having many of the same tags (i.e. the same event or subject), use this function to speed up the process. In the dialog, use the [select files] button to open a gallery window with thumbnail images from which you can select the image files (link). After selecting files, specify tags to add to the images by clicking tags in the "defined tags" list. If you need to create new tags, use the [manage tags] button as described above. When done specifying image files and tags, press [proceed] to add the tags to the image files.

Removing tags works much the same way: select the image files and the tags to remove. You can add and remove at the same time if the images to process are the same ones. To replace tags, specify the new names in the add tags list and the old names in the remove tags list. To get a list of images having specific tags (which you want to remove or replace), use the Search Images function (below) to find the images, then start this function and use the [select files] button to add all the image files that you just found, or any subset.


View Metadata (short)
View Metadata (long)
View Captions and Comments
The View Metadata functions will display metadata for the current image file, if available. EXIF metadata contains the date and time of a photo, shutter speed, focal length, pixel dimensions, etc. Digital cameras store this data inside the image. IPTC metadata contains tags (from Fotoxx, Photoshop ...) and captions (frequently found in published images). If an image is edited and then saved, the metadata is updated and stored with the new image. The View Metadata short report outputs the most commonly needed data, including the photo date and time, exposure data, focal length (real and 35mm equivalent), user-assigned tags and star rating, comments, caption, and a history of Fotoxx edit functions that have been applied to the image. The long report reports all metadata available. The Captions and Comments report shows only captions and comments in a small window.

Fotoxx uses the following EXIF / IPTC data items:
 
    Key Name Fotoxx Usage
    Date/Time Original Edit Metadata function - image date
    Keywords Edit Metadata function - image tags
    Rating Edit Metadata function - image stars
    User Comments Edit Metadata function
    Caption-Abstract Edit Metadata function
    Geotags Edit Geotags function, 3 search image functions
    Image History
History of Fotoxx edits applied to the image
    any key Edit Any Metadata, Delete Metadata


Edit Any Metadata
A specific metadata ID (key) can be added (if legitimate) or revised. Enter the key name and press [fetch] to retrieve existing data, if any. Enter the new data and press [save] to save the new or revised data. You may enter the key name in lower case and without blanks, e.g. the EXIF key "User Comment" may be more easily entered as "usercomment". The dialog is live: the current key name will be fetched automatically for each new image file opened, and it can then be revised and saved if wanted.


Delete Metadata
This function allows deletion of a specified metadata key, or all metadata at once. Input a key name in lower case and without blanks, e.g. the EXIF key "User Comment" is entered as "usercomment".
 

Show Captions on Image
Show the metadata items IPTC Caption and EXIF User Comments at the top of each image displayed. This menu is a toggle switch - the display of captions and comments is set on and off alternatively. If neither is available, nothing is displayed. If only one is available, it is displayed. If both are available, they are displayed on two lines. The lengths are truncated at 200 characters. To see up to 1000 characters, use the View Captions and Comments function. If Show Captions switched ON, captions and comments are also displayed during a Slide Show.
 

Geotags - General
Modern cameras can record the location of each photo, using an internal GPS receiver. Latitude, longitude, city and country are recorded in the EXIF metadata of the image JPEG or RAW file. The Fotoxx Edit Geotags function allows location data to be entered or revised for any image. The Fotoxx Search Images function can find images by location, including an optional range: e.g. find all photos taken within 30 km of London. Locations may also be specified by clicking on a world map. There are two functions that can find all images from a specified location or region: Images by Location/Date: find all images for a country, a country and city, or a country, city and date range. Images by Map Location: click on a world map to show all images within a range of the clicked location.


Download Geolocations
This function downloads two files, cities-geotags and world-map.jpg (about 8 MB total). These are saved in /home/<user>/.fotoxx/geotags. The cities file has location data for over 3000 world cities (city, country, latitude, longitude). The city names are English common names. The data comes from http://www.travelgis.com. Do this download function before trying to add geotags to images, since most locations you will likely need will be more easily available. Any locations that you add to your images are automatically available for subsequent use, and are checked first (also for partial matches) before the downloaded locations are checked. If existing location data is revised (spelling or latitude/longitude) before adding to an image, the revision is saved. Future versions of cities-geotags can be downloaded without loss of user changes and additions. All locations in your image EXIF data are automatically available and are searched first for partial matches.


Edit Geotags
The dialog displays the location data for the current image, if any. The live display is updated when a new image is opened. For an image with missing or incorrect location data, enter a city name and use the [Find] button to either complete the data in the dialog, or get a list of matching cities to choose from (e.g. Bermingham, United Kingdom and Bermingham, United States). Partial matches are found, so you can usually enter a leading substring, e.g. "hono" for Honolulu. Use the [Apply] button to enter the data into the EXIF metadata for the current image, and also into the search index for later searching by location. If the data is revised in the dialog (spelling of city/country, or revision of latitude/longitude), this will take precedence for future city searches. Use the [Prev] button to fill the dialog data with the last location used. If the [Find] button does not find a city (it is missing from the cities-geotags file), you can use the [Web] button to find the city and location data from an internet web service (MapQuest Open for now, but this can change). The location data is completed and returned into the dialog. These names are not standardized and there are many duplicates, so check the returned data for reasonableness and change the spelling and capitalization if needed. The [Apply] button will add the location data to the image, and this location will be available for future use by using the [Find] button. If the [Web] button fails, you can manually find the city in the internet and enter the location data into the Edit Geotags dialog. Pressing [apply] will add the data to the current image and make the location available for future use.

Here are two web sites to look-up a city/country (there are many others):
   http://www.worldatlas.com/aatlas/findlatlong.htm
   http://brainoff.com/geocoder/

Blank the latitude and longitude if you want to save only the city and/or country name in the image file. If the latititude / longitude data is changed from the values returned by [Find], these values are saved and will be used from now on for new entries for this city. Previous images with the same city are not revised. You can use Images by Location/Date (see below) to find all images for a city, and Batch Add Geotags (see below) to change the latitude/longitude for all of them.

If the location name is not a city (e.g. Yellowstone Park), simply use this name for the City input.

Note: Non-English locales: If a comma is used for a decimal point in latitude/longitude, this is accepted but converted to a period internally. The web service returns periods.

Note: If a city is saved without latitude/longitude, there will be no "red dot" to mark the city on the world map, and finding photos for this city by clicking the world map will not work (see below, Images by Map Location). The other method to find photos by city (Images by Location/Date, see below) will still work.

The [Map] button opens a world map in Tab W. Zoom-in to the area you need and click on a map position. The closest known city (within the specified range) will be selected. Use [Apply] to save the location into the image file.

For a series of photos made in the same location, you can quickly add location data. After getting the location data for the first image, use the toolbar [Next] button to open the next image, then the Edit Geotags [Prev] button to fetch the previous location data, then the [Apply] button to save into the current image file. If there are many photos, you can use Batch Add Geotags (see below) to quickly update all of them.

Summary:
 + Open an image file and select the Edit Geotags menu.
 + Enter (or change) a city name (possibly abbreviated) in the dialog.
 + Use [find] to find the city and auto-fill country, latitude, longitude.
 + If there are multiple matches, choose from the list.
 + If there are too many matches, add more letters to the city or supply the country and try again.
 + If there are zero matches (not found), try the [Web] button (country is required).
 + If still not found, add more letters to the city.
 + If still not found, use one of the above web services and input the data manually.
 + Use the [apply] button to update the image file and make the location available for future use.
 + Open the next image (use the toolbar [next] button if appropriate).
 + Use the [prev] and [apply] buttons to add the same location data again, if wanted.


Batch Add Geotags
With this function, you can select many images and add the same location data to all of them. Use the [select files] button to select the image files from a gallery window (link). Then get the location data as described above in Edit Geotags. Press [proceed] to start the update process. Use this function also to correct city/country spellings or latitude/longitude data, or to fix inconsistencies.


Images by Location / Date

This is a fast way to find all photos made in a given country or city and country. In the dialog, select the desired level of grouping: by country, by country and city, by country and city and date. In the last case, you can select a date range for grouping of images having nearby dates. A number N will group images with dates that are N days or less apart from other images in the group (i.e. gaps are <= N days).

A popup window shows all cities found in the image geotags, and the dates of photos taken in those cities. The count of photos taken is also shown. In the above example, 9 photos are from Grossglockner starting Oct. 19, 2006. Click on a line in the window to get a thumbnail gallery of those images, and from there you can click on any image to view or edit. The gallery becomes the current set of images for the [Prev] and [Next] and buttons, until [Open] is used to open some other file.


Images by Map Location
This function opens a world map image in Tab W, and a dialog to input a search range. The search range sets the maximum distance from a nominal location to search for photos, and is 10 kilometers by default. Map locations having corresponding geotagged images are marked with red dots. Click on a map location to get a gallery of images for the location: all images geotagged within the search range. The window changes to the G tab and the gallery appears. You can select Tab W and click a new location for a new gallery report. The search range can be changed only if you go back to the menu: Images by Map Location.

Navigation: zoom and pan/scroll for the world map is slightly different from image files: +   mouse wheel forward: zoom world map to full size, centered on the mouse position
 +  mouse wheel backward: shrink world map to fit within the window
 +  left click on a red dot: show gallery of images geotagged for that marked location
 +  left click NOT on a red dot: zoom world map to full size, centered on the clicked position
 +  right click: shrink world map to fit within the window
 +  toolbar zoom+ and zoom- buttons: zoom to full size or shrink to fit the window
 +  keyboard Z key: alternate between full size and shrink to fit
 +  mouse drag: the zoomed world map pans and scrolls like other images


Search Images
Use the Search Images function to find images having any desired metadata. A search index file is used for searching, which makes it possible to search thousands of images per second. The index contains a subset of the EXIF and IPTC metadata in the image files. Some of this data is automatic, created by the camera. Other data, such as tags and star ratings, can be added by the user (using Fotoxx, Photoshop, others.). You can rearrange your image directories and image files without losing anything - you must only regenerate the search index file, which is simple and fast (see Index Image Files).

An example search: find all images dated 2006 or later, rated with 4 stars or more, having tag "buildings" and geotag "Dresden". The output report for this search is shown here:




Search Images Dialogs

The main dialog is on the left. The Geotags dialog appears if the [geotags] button is used to select location data, and the Metadata dialog appears if the [other] button is used to select metadata that is not available in the main dialog.

In the main dialog, select which images to search, either "all" (the entire image database) or "current", meaning the current set of images as shown in the current Tab G gallery list (can be a directory, collection, or the results of a prior image search). Then choose what to do with the matching images found: "new set" means replace the current set with the images found, "add" means add them to the current set, and "remove" means remove them from the current set (to remove images, you must search the current set).

Select the desired report type. The gallery report is a page of thumbnail images, as long as needed to hold all the images that match the search criteria. The metadata report has both thumbnail images and a list of metadata items beside each thumbnail. These are some standard items (date, rating, tags, geotags, captions, comments) and any items you added in the metadata selection dialog.

Enter your search criteria. Select desired tags, dates, star ratings, text (comments, captions) and file names. Available tags are shown and can be chosen with point and click. Use the radio buttons all or any to indicate if all or any of the given values must be present for an image to be selected. Press the [proceed] button to perform the search. Matching images are displayed in the Tab G gallery window. Choose images to view or edit by clicking the thumbnails. Navigate this set of searched images using the navigation buttons in the gallery window, or the [prev] and [next] buttons on the Tab F image window. You can save the searched images as a permanent collection, which can be further edited to add or remove images (see Manage Collections).

A date range may be entered to restrict the search to images within the date range. The format is yyyymmdd. Images are selected which have a date on or after the first date, if present, and on or before the second date, if present. Missing month/day default to 01/01 for the low date limit and to 12/31 for the high date limit.

A pair of star ratings may be entered to restrict the results to images having a star rating within the given range. A missing low value implies no stars, and a missing high value means the hightest rating, 5 stars.

Image directory and file names may also be searched. In the field search files, enter any number of names used for your image directories and file names, separated by blanks. An input of [ egypt cairo ] would match all image directory or file names containing either of these strings. Name matching is not sensitive to case, and substrings will also match.

Image comments and captions may also be searched. Enter the words to search for in the dialog search text field, separated by blanks. These will be matched to every word in the comments and captions of all images, and matching images are selected. Substrings will also match.

The radio buttons all and any apply to tags, text, and file names. You can select images having ALL the entered strings, or ANY of the entered strings. Example: if the search file field contains [egypt cairo] and "any" is selected, then image files with either of these names within the directory or file name would be selected.

Geotags Dialog
The [geotags] dialog selects images by location. Enter a city name and press [find] (as described in Edit Geotags) to get country and latitude/longitude added automatically. Enter a kilometer range to determine the max. distance of images from this location to be included. If latitude/longitude and kilometer range are present in the dialog, these are used to locate images by latitude/longitude. If you want to search only by city and/or country name, erase latitude / longitude and leave the city and/or country. Use the [map] button to get a world map. Click on the map to set a latitude/longitude to search. You may enter null for city, country, or latitude / longitude to find images lacking these geotags.

Search Metadata Dialog
You may use this dialog to search for metadata items not present in the main dialog. The items available for any given image file can be shown using View Metadata (long). These include camera make and model, exposure time, F-number, ISO, metering mode, focal length, shooting mode, etc. etc. You can enter shortcut names like "exposuretime" instead of "Exposure Time". You may also enter match criteria, if wanted, so that only the images with matching metadata are reported. For example, if you enter "model" with the match value "DMC-FZ28" (my Panasonic) then only the images taken with this camera will be reported. You can also enter multiple match values for one key, separated by blanks.

Performance
If no extra metadata to report is entered, then thousands of images per second are searched and reported (assuming a strong PC). If extra metadata is entered, the search performance slows to something like 90 images per second. This is because the image files are being read to extract the metadata not included in the search index. For good performance, always use dates, file names, etc. to maximize the use of the search index and minimize the number of image files that must be read.

There is a separate topic on image organization options.



Areas Menu


Overview
Edit functions normally apply to the entire image, but it is possible to edit part of an image (an "area") and leave the rest unchanged. If an image area has been selected, then most edit functions will work only within this area. Some functions ignore a selected area. An area may be selected before starting an edit function, or while an edit function is active. The selected area is immediately active, prior edits are retained, and future edits will apply only within the area. If another edit function is started, the selected area remains active, so it is possible to carry out a series of edits on one area.

"Layers" in Photoshop and Gimp are "areas" in Fotoxx. Instead of selecting something from the image, making a separate layer from the selection, performing edit functions on the layer and finally merging the layers, you select something in the image and perform edit functions on the selection, with WYSIWYG feedback during the edit. Areas can also be saved to a file, copied and pasted into other images, and edited there.


Select Area


The Select Area dialog is started with the menu Areas > Select. Select one of the 8 methods (explained below). Each method selects image areas in a different way. You can change methods at any time, and the selected areas are accumulated. An outline of the selected image area(s) is shown as you add or remove areas from the selection. The [Finish] button is used to make the area ready for subsequent image edits within the area. The [Hide] button removes the area outline, giving you better visibility of image edits and area edge blending. Use the [Show] button to show the area outline. The select area dialog can be exited and re-started later to modify an existing area or start a new one.

Line Drawing Color
The color used for the mouse selection circle and the area outline can be changed with the toolbar button [Color]. Choose a color for good visibility against the given background. You can change this at any time.

The following methods are used to enclose one or more image spaces that will belong to the final area. These methods may be used in any sequence to define spaces that are either joined or detached.
  Rectangle  Drag the mouse to enclose a rectangular area.
  Ellipse  Drag the mouse to enclose an elliptical area.
  Freehand Draw    Drag and click the mouse to draw lines that outline an enclosed space.
  Follow Edge   Click along the edge of an object in the image to draw lines that follow
 the edge, or drag the mouse to draw freehand.
  Replace  Drag the mouse near an area edge-line to move the edge to the mouse.
  Controls for the
  methods below
 "mouse radius" sets the size of a selection circle around the mouse pointer.
 "match level" sets the color match (0-100%) required for pixel selection.
  Select area
  within mouse   
 Left/right drag to select/unselect all pixels within the mouse circle.
 Selection is independent of color.
  Select one matching
  color within mouse
 Click on the image to select a color. Left/right drag to select/unselect pixels
 inside the mouse circle that match the selected color within "match level".
  Select all matching
  colors within mouse
 Left/right drag to select/unselect pixels surrounding the mouse that match
 the color of any pixels inside the mouse circle, within "match level".

The following paragraphs explain the details of each method.

Rectangle
Drag the mouse from one corner to the opposite corner of the desired rectangular area to select. A rectangle is drawn to enclose the area. Right-click to delete and start over. Repeat the process to select more rectangular areas.

Ellipse
This works the same as rectangle selection, except that the area enclosed is an ellipse.

Freehand draw
Drag the mouse (left button down) to draw a freehand (curvy) line, or left-click to connect a straight line from the last point drawn to the point clicked. Continue around the target area until it is surrounded with connected curves and lines. Right click to remove previous lines (mistakes). A right click will remove the previous clicked or dragged line, up to 50 pixels. Right click repeatedly to remove more. A new clicked line will always connect to the end of the previous line. A new dragged line will connect to the previous line if it is started close to the end of that line. If it is started elsewhere, a disconnected line will be drawn. You can start a new drag from far away and draw back to meet the previous line. If a clicked line connects to an undesired point (i.e. you don't want to connect to the last line drawn), right click to erase it and then use drag to start a new sequence of lines. A right-button drag can be used to erase small segments: right-drag closely along a line to erase it, then left-drag to re-draw the line. At the end, an area must be fully enclosed, with no gaps. Lines that overlap a little at the ends are OK. Gaps can be difficult to find and correct, so work at 100% image size or greater and be careful. A series of lines automatically connected with left clicks will not leave gaps, but deviation from this sequence is likely to create gaps. To reduce the possibility of gaps, use deliberate overlaps when manually connecting lines.

Follow edge
High-contrast pixels (likely object edges) between the last point drawn and a newly clicked position are found and connected. This is effective for clear edges that are not too irregular. Fuzzy and ragged edges may not work well and freehand draw will be needed if high precision is necessary. The rules for connecting lines are the same as explained above. Dragging the mouse instead of clicking works like freehand draw.

Replace
Drag the mouse near and along an existing area edge-line. The line will be erased and redrawn at the mouse pointer. This is a faster way to make a small adjustment in an existing line.

Mouse Radius and Match Level
These two controls apply only to the selection methods below them in the dialog box. Mouse Radius defines the size of a circle around the mouse pointer. Pixels within the circle are selected, or they provide a set of colors for matching and selecting pixels outside the circle. Match Level defines a degree of match (0-100%) to select pixels based on their color and brightness. 0 means anything matches, and 100 means a perfect match is required.

Select area within mouse
Left click or drag will select the pixels enclosed by the mouse circle. A right click will unselect the last selection (repeat to unselect more). A right drag will unselect the enclosed pixels.

Select one matching color within mouse
Click on the image to select a color. The color is shown on the color button. You can also use the button to set a color directly. Left/right drag to select/unselect pixels within the mouse circle that match the selected color within match level. Adjust the match level down/up to match more/fewer pixels.

Select all matching colors within mouse
Left/right drag to select/unselect pixels inside the mouse circle. Pixels beyond the mouse circle are also included if they meet these conditions: 1) their color matches any color inside the mouse circle, within the current match level. 2) they are within "search range" of the mouse pointer. This is a factor of mouse radius, e.g. if mouse radius is 20 and search range is 3, then the search range is 60 pixels from the mouse pointer. Drag the mouse over new areas you want to include. Watch the selected area expand into areas with colors matching those inside the mouse circle. If you go too far, right click to remove the last selection. Repeat if needed to remove more previous selections. Reduce the radius or increase the match level to gain finer control - the selection will expand more slowly and stay closer to the mouse circle. A small radius and high match level can be used to follow along an edge and select pixels up to the edge with good precision. Change to a larger radius and/or lower match level to select larger areas after the fine work is complete. Right drag acts as an unselect: pixels inside the mouse circle and matching pixels within the search range are unselected. If a selection goes too far, it is often easy to correct this by unselecting from outside the selected area. You may need some practice to get a feeling for this and be able to work efficiently.

The firewall checkbox can be used to stop the search wherever allready-selected pixels are met. Use this if the border of an area has already been defined and you want to stay within this border.

Summary
  left drag select pixels inside mouse circle and those with matching colors within search range
  right click undo previous selection, repeat to unselect more
  right drag unselect pixels inside mouse circle and those with matching colors within search range

Blend Width
Edits made within an area can be blended with the surrounding image over a distance called "blend width". At the edge of the selected area, the image is the original (unedited) image. At a distance of "blend width" from any edge inside the area, the image is the edited image. For distances in-between, the pixels are a mix of original and edited pixels with a gradual transition. Use the Blend Width control to set the blend width for the current or subsequent edit functions. Zero blend width gives a hard edge to the area edit. Increasing blend width makes the edges of the edit more gradual and harder to distinguish from the original image. Changing the value for the first time after editing an area will cause the edge distance to be calculated for each pixel in the area. This is normally fast (a few seconds), but it may take minutes if the area is large and has a complex geometry (a very long edge). Whenever an area is re-edited or inverted, the edge calculation is discarded and must be repeated if blending is wanted. If the edge of a selected area is within 4 pixels of the image edge, it is no longer considered an edge for blending. If a selected area includes a portion of the image edge, and you do not want blending along this edge (the normal case), be sure the edge of the area is within 4 pixels of the image edge.

Edge Creep
An area that has been finished can be expanded or contracted in 1-pixel steps. The area remains finished, but blend width is no longer valid and must be repeated if needed. This can be helpful to reduce edge effects when an area selected by matching colors is edited in a way that changes its brightness. Selection by color may leave a narrow band of underselected or overselected pixels along an edge where color has become mixed with background. Expanding or contracting the area a pixel or two can produce a cleaner looking edge.

Show / Hide
Use [Hide] to hide the area outlines. This is useful when editing the image/area, to better see the effects of the edit without interference from the area outlines. Use [Show] to show the outlines and resume editing the area.

Finish
When you are finished selecting the enclosed spaces, use the [Finish] button to complete the process. A popup dialog will ask you to click the mouse inside each enclosed space in sequence. This action launches a search for all pixels within the enclosed space, and these are mapped and saved. The enclosed space is temporarily colored so you can see exactly what part of the image is being selected. The dialog will show the status of the search, "success" or "outline has a gap". If there is a gap in the outline, an attempt is made to show where the gap is: you will see a line coming out of the colored space to meet the edge of an imaginary rectangle enclosing the space. You may be able to follow this line back to the gap, but if the area is convoluted finding the gap can be difficult. Each use of [finish] will produce a different picture that may lead you to the gap. Carefully inspect the outline of the area, close the hole, and use [Finish] again. An area is not effective for edits until it is successfully finished. Any enclosed area can be selected, even those not explicitly outlined (e.g. if you use "select within mouse" to select a donut with a hole, you can still click the hole to include it in the area).

Areas selected using one of the "select within mouse" methods are automatically finished whenever you click inside any enclosed area. These areas are mapped during the selection process, whereas areas selected with one of the "line drawing" methods are mapped only when clicked.

Disable / Enable
Disable the current area and keep the data so that it can be re-activated later. This allows you to alternate edits within a selected area and edits for the entire image.

Invert
This function inverts an existing area: the entire image is selected except for the existing area. Using the function two times returns the original selected area. Inverting a selected area invalidates the edge calculation which will be repeated if edge blending is selected.

Unselect
Discard the current area permanently.


Area Show / Hide
Show or hide the outline of the current area. Hiding the area is useful when the area is being modified with one of the edit functions. This makes it easier to judge the effects of the edit. These are also available as buttons in the Select Area dialog.


Area Enable / Disable
Disable the current area and keep the data so that it can be re-activated later (Enable menu). This allows you to alternate edits within a selected area and edits for the entire image. These are also available as buttons in the Select Area dialog.


Area Invert
Invert an existing area: the entire image is selected except for the existing area. Using the function two times returns the original selected area. Inverting a selected area invalidates the edge calculation which must be repeated if edge blending is desired. This is also available as a button in the Select Area dialog.


Area Unselect
Permanently discard the current area. This is also available as a button in the Select Area dialog.


Area Copy / Paste
Copy: The current selected area is copied and saved in memory.
Paste: Left click on the current image and the saved area is pasted into the image. It can be moved around by dragging with the mouse. Use the resize and angle buttons to resize or rotate the pasted object. Use the edge blend slider to make a blended edge if desired. The brightness slider is used to adjust the brightness to match the background. Press the [done] button in the popup dialog. The pasted area now behaves like a Select Area. You can edit within the area and use the [blend width] control in the Select Area dialog.


Area Open and Save
If a selected area is active or has been saved in memory with Select > Copy, it can be saved to an image file using the menu Select > Save. You are asked to supply a name. Two files are saved: the image is saved to filename.tiff and the transparency data is saved to filename.info.tiff. These files reside at /home/<user>/.fotoxx/saved_areas.

Use Select > Open to choose a saved area (choose the xxx.tiff file, not xxx.info.tiff), which will be dumped into the image where it can be moved around, resized, etc. as with the copy and paste functions.



Image Menu


Trim/Rotate Image

This function is used to remove unwanted image margins, and/or to rotate an image to level or upright it. When the dialog opens, a "selection rectangle" is placed over the image. The areas outside this rectangle are darkened and represent the parts of the image that will be removed. Drag any corner of the rectangle to move that corner. The dialog box shows the current width/height ratio of the selection rectangle. If the box lock ratio is checked, then moving one corner of the rectangle will also move the opposite corner to keep the same ratio. You can also drag from the middle of the rectangle to shift the whole rectangle without changing its dimensions. You can use the width and height spin buttons to adjust the pixel dimensions (or type-in new values), and the selection rectangle will adjust to these.

The maximum button resets the trim rectangle to the full image size (useful if you want only to rotate the image). The invert button will invert the width/height ratio (e.g. 2.0 to 0.5). The previous button retrieves the width and height values last used for a previous image (useful for setting multiple images to the same size, e.g. to fit a monitor or beamer).

The six ratio buttons allow you to choose a preset width/height ratio. You can change the ratio button names and the corresponding ratios with the button [customize] which starts a new dialog shown on the right. Enter desired button labels in the first row, and corresponding width/height ratios in the second row (the default names are the same as the ratios, except for "gold"). Use the ratio 16:9 for the HDTV format. The [gold] button uses the golden ratio, about 1.62:1. You do not have to keep it.

To level a tilted image, use the mouse to drag the right edge up or down until the image looks level. Use the 90 degree buttons to convert an image taken in vertical format to horizontal. The spin control can be used to set any angle, -180 to +180 degrees. No resolution is lost with 90 degree rotation. For other angles, the loss of resolution is about 1/2 pixel. The auto-trim option automatically cuts off the edges (making them perfectly horizontal and vertical) when an image is rotated a small amount to make it level. A left-click on the image will add vertical and horizontal guide lines to help with image leveling. Use right-click to remove them.

There is another small dialog to rotate an image by 90°. This is started from the right-click popup menu from the main window or a gallery thumbnail. This is a convenient way to upright a turned image. The image is rotated left or right and written to disk (no need to save the image as with other edit functions). The dialog stays open so you can go through a series of images rapidly.


Auto-Trim Image

The composite and warp functions can leave black margins where images did not overlay or were bent away from the edge. Auto-Trim automatically sets trim margins to omit these areas and then starts the Trim/Rotate function (previous topic) with the margins pre-set. If these are correct, press the [done] button to finish. If not, change the margins as described above. Auto-Trim tries to find a maximum rectangle that does not overlap any of the black margin areas. This may or may not be the desired margins, so you can keep them or move them with the mouse before committing with the [done] button.


Resize Image (aka rescale)

This function sets a new image width and height. You can input the new pixel width and height directly or choose a percent change for width and height. Buttons are present for setting the new size to 3/4, 2/3, 1/2, 1/3, or 1/4 of the original size. Using one of these ratios will minimize loss of resolution. The [Prev] button recalls the settings previously used, which is convenient if multiple images are being set to the same size. If the lock ratio box is checked, the original width / height ratio will be preserved, meaning that if one dimension is changed, the other dimension will be changed to match. The change is made immediately, but the image will look the same unless it becomes smaller than the window, causing a visible shrinkage. Leave the dialog with [done] to save the changes or [cancel] to keep the original size. The image file size (status bar) is not updated until the modified image is saved.


Flip Image
Choose either horizontal or vertical flip from the dialog. The image is reversed (mirrored) vertically or horizontally. Repeating the flip restores the original image. Doing both a horizontal and vertical flip is the same as a 180 degree rotation.


Add Text to Image

Write text directly on the image. Enter the text into the dialog. Multiple lines can be used. After entering the text, left-click the mouse where you want the text on the image. Click or drag to move the text elsewhere. Right click to remove the text. Use the [Font] button to select a different font. Use the [Size] control to increase or decrease the text size. Use the [Angle] control to change the slant angle of the text. The other controls allow you to provide a background color around the text, a text outline color, and a shadow effect. You can select the color and transparency for all of these. The width control adjusts the width of outlines and shadows. The shadow angle control sets the slant angle of the shadow. The [apply] button makes the current text permanent, so you can start a new one without leaving the dialog. The [Open] and [Save] buttons start a file chooser dialog with which you can load or save all text data from or to a file. All the items in the dialog are loaded or saved, so you can keep a collection of often-used text strings and settings. The Metadata buttons allow you to retrieve the image caption or comments, which will be put into the Text input field. From there you can modify it as needed. The modifications are not written back to the image metadata.

Making a Watermark: use a text transparency of 70% or more and a background transparency of 100%. The text should be faint but readable. To add a "relief" effect, use Select Area to put a box around the text and use the function Effects > Embossing to raise the text (if brighter than the image) or recess the text (if darker).



Retouch Menu


Voodoo Enhance
This is a fast automatic image enhancement with limited capability. This is sometimes effective and "good enough" for rapidly processing many photos. There is no dialog - the modification is simply done when the menu is selected. Reject the change with the [undo] button if desired. The modification consists of a slight flattening of the brightness distribution, an expansion of the brightness range if less than the full range is used, and a slight increase in the color saturation, more for darker areas of the image than brighter areas. The effect is sometimes minimal or even negative.


Retouch Combo
This function handles all aspects of adjusting image brightness and color: overall brightness and contrast, brightness curves (overall, per color), color saturation, color temperature, white balance and black level.
 
 
brightness curves, overall and by RGB color
x-axis is initial brightness, y-axis is revised brightness
 
This example shows a reduction of brightness for
darker image areas, and an increase for brighter areas.
 
 
Use the sliders for brightness and contrast to optimize
the image. This may be adequate for most photos.
To fine tune brightness and contrast, edit the curves
using the mouse.

brightness
moves the entire curve up or down
contrast
moves the curve lower and upper parts in opposite directions
low color / high
increases or decreases color saturation
warmer / cooler
adjusts color temperature (reddish - blueish)
dark areas / bright
apply color changes to darker or brighter image areas
checkbox
enable the mouse to click on a black point or gray/white point

After making initial adjustments using the sliders, you can fine tune brightness and contrast by editing the curves with the mouse to change which parts of the image have increased or decreased brightness or contrast. The ALL curve adjusts all colors, and the RGB curves adjust individual colors. Use ALL first, then make revisions using RGB.

dark - bright image areas
This modifies the operation of the color adjustments to affect primarily darker or brighter image areas. Leave in the middle to adjust all areas equally.
 
Checkbox: click for white balance or black level
If this box is checked, this function takes ownership of the mouse and processes mouse clicks (otherwise clicks on the image will zoom the image, as usual). If you click on a fairly bright gray or white spot on the image, this will be used as a white balance set point, and the image RGB colors will be shifted to make this spot pure gray or white. This is the easiest way to correct a photo with an overall color tint because of bad lighting. You can use the warmer-cooler slider after clicking, and this correction will be added to the prior result. If you click on a very dark spot on the image, this will be used as a black set point, and the image RGB colors will be shifted to make this spot black. This is one way to reduce fogginess in a photo, or make the background sky look black instead of gray in a long-exposure astronomy photo. The All curve base node will be shifted to the right to reflect the new black point.

Buttons
Bdist - a brightness distribution graph is shown in a small popup window
Reset - set all controls back to a neutral position - image is also reset
Prev - set all controls to the values used for the previous image
Done - finish the edit, close the dialog, save the control settings
Cancel - cancel the edit, reset the image, close the dialog

You can use the Prev button when processing a series of images made under the same lighting and therefore needing the same or nearly the same adjustments.


Tone Mapping

Tone mapping increases the apparent brightness range of an image by increasing local contrast. It is especially useful to improve HDR images, but can also be applied to any image. HDR images often seem "flat" because the contrast between nearby pixels has been reduced to make the overall contrast fit within the available range. Tone Mapping increases the contrast between nearby pixels without increasing the overall contrast. It relies on the nature of human vision: contrast within a small angle is perceived more strongly than contrast over a large angle. Tone mapping can bring out subtle details (low contrast) that would otherwise be hard to notice. Other methods can also be used: adjusting a brightness curve can increase contrast for a selected brightness range (possibly at the expense of others). Flattening the brightness distribution can spread the available contrast (brightness range) more evenly. Increasing color saturation can also bring out more detail. These methods operate globally: all pixels of a given color and brightness are processed the same. Tone mapping processes pixels differently depending on the brightness of surrounding pixels and is more effective at enhancing detail and the perceived brightness range.

In the dialog, the graphic curve determines how much local contrast is increased depending on initial local contrast. The left end of the x-axis corresponds to low-contrast pixels and the right end high-contrast pixels. Raise the left side of the curve to increase the contrast of low-contrast pixels (but this will also enhance low-level noise). The Amplify slider below the curve regulates the internal algorithmic calculation, from no contrast amplification on the left to full amplification on the right. If moved too far to the right, the image may show artifacts (bright or dark "rays"), so push it back until these disappear. The curve can be dragged with the mouse and its effect on the image will show up in a second or so (depending on image size and CPU speed). The amplify slider also needs time to show up in the image. If more contrast is wanted, raise the curve. If uniform areas (e.g. sky) become mottled, pull the left end of the curve down to reduce amplification for low-contrast pixels. In some cases it will be best to select different areas of the image and process them separately, e.g. more conservative for sky, more aggressive for textured surfaces like stone walls.


Brightness Distribution

Flatten: This is a fast and easy way to compensate for a common limitation in photos: the brightness range is inadequate, or areas of the image have nearly the same brightness and details are lost. This function redistributes the pixel brightness so that each brightness level is more equally represented. Technically, the brightness distribution is made more uniform (flatter).

Move the slider and watch the image, which may lag a moment. Some images will show good results, others may not be helped or even become worse. Using this function within a selected area is often very effective. Edge blending may be needed to make the boundary invisible. A bright monotone area (typically sky) may show "banding" (stripes or patches with brightness steps large enough to notice). This is caused when a narrow brightness range gets spread apart, with larger gaps between the new brightness levels. Example: a region with pixel brightness levels of 250-255 in steps of 1 is spread out so that the new brightness levels are 235-255 with steps of 4. Use the Deband slider to reduce this effect, especially in the brighter image areas.

Darken and Brighten: These functions expand the brightness range of an image that does not utilize the full brightness range available, possibly making contrast-poor. You can see this in the brightness distribution graph. If the distribution shows no or few pixels at the extreme low and high ends of the horizontal scale, the image may benefit from expanding the brightness range. This means that the darkest pixels are made darker and/or the brightest pixels are made brighter. Move the sliders to extend the brightness range while observing the image.


Brightness Ramp


This example shows brightening of the
upper right image quadrant.



This function varies the brightness across an image, with the direction and magnitude of the brightness slope determined by editable curves. You can use this to compensate for uneven lighting or vignetting (darker image corners). The function dialog displays two editable curves, horizontal and vertical. The horizontal curve adjusts brightness horizontally, and the vertical curve adjusts brightness vertically. Move the curves in the directions labeled "+" and "‒" to increase or decrease the image brightness in the corresponding image area. To remove vignetting in the image corners, move both ends of both curves in the "+" direction while fixing the middle areas or even moving them in the "‒" direction. To brighten the upper right corner, move the right end of the horizontal curve and the upper end of the vertical curve in the "+" direction, as in the example above.

If used with a selected area, the scales refer to the enclosing rectangle of the area instead of the whole image. Thus you can select an area of an image and apply a brightness ramp across the area. If the button "all" is selected (default) then all colors are adjusted equally (i.e. brightness is adjusted). If one of the colors is selected, the image is adjusted for that color only, and the "all" curve is ignored. Any or all three RGB colors may be adjusted in this manner. You can use this to remove a color-caste that varies across an image or image area.


Paint Edits

Use this function in combination with some other retouch edit function. Specify a mouse radius and "power" factors for the mouse center and radius edge. Start a retouch edit function if not already active. The mouse pointer will be surrounded by a circle with the specified radius. When the mouse is dragged over an area of the image, the current retouch function is applied within the circle. The strength of the function is regulated by the power factors. Typically you will use a high value at the center and zero at the edge, meaning that the strength of the edit will be maximum at the center, changing gradually to zero at the edge of the circle. As you drag the mouse over the same area repeatedly, the edits are slowly accumulated. For example, if the edit function is Retouch Combo, and the brightness curve is moved upward (brighten), then the image will slowly brighten in the area where the mouse is dragged. This is called dodge and burn in some image editors, referring to an old darkroom procedure for changing the exposure level for selected image areas. In this case, you can use many edit functions effectively.

Use the [undo] and [redo] toolbar buttons to monitor the change, which may be hard to notice at first. Set the center power to 100 to make faster changes (with less fine control). Use a left-button drag to weaken the edit or ultimately erase it. When done using one edit function in one or more image areas, use the [done] button on the edit dialog to complete the edit. Use the [reset area] button on the Paint Edits dialog to erase the active area that is now left over from the mouse dragging. If you leave this area active and start a new edit function, the results may be strange (all previous painting is immediately applied to the new function).

A suggested approach is: (1) start the Paint Edits dialog, (2) start an edit function with its initial settings (the effect on the image will be zero since no mouse dragging has been done), (3) drag the mouse over the desired areas and watch the effect, (4) adjust the edit function settings, (5) alternate between the previous two steps.

This method to "paint" a retouch function incrementally can improve selected areas of an image quickly and easily. It works with any edit function that can use selected areas. The most useful are Retouch Combo, Brightness Distribution, Tone Mapping, Sharpen, Blur, Reduce Noise. Most of the Color and Effects functions can also be used.



Repair Menu


Sharpen Image

This function sharpens a blurry image. Three methods are implemented: unsharp mask, gradient and Kuwahara. Unsharp mask: a fast and effective method also found in Gimp and other tools. A technical description can be found via Google. Gradient: steepens brightness transition areas directly, somewhat like tone-mapping. Kuwahara: surrounding neighborhoods of pixels above, below, left and right of a pixel are compared to each-other. The pixel is given the mean color of the neighborhood with the smallest variance in brightness. This forces pixels on a blurry edge to move to one side of the edge or the other. Edges are made very sharp, but details can be lost.

The radius value limits the distance over which pixels around an edge are changed. It should be small for images that are slightly fuzzy and larger for poorer images. Amount controls the strength of the modification. Threshold suppresses changes to low-contrast pixels: a higher values reduces the amplification of low-level irregularities (image noise, uneven skin tones, etc.).

Press the button for the method selected and wait a few seconds to see the result. Make changes and repeat the process until satisfied. You can go back and forth among the methods to compare which is best for a given image. Use Select Area to operate on different parts of an image with different methods and parameters.


Blur image
This function can be used to blur or un-sharpen an image. Each pixel is mixed with neighboring pixels to reduce the differences, making edges fuzzy. Enter a value for blur radius and press [apply] to see the results. A small value mixes each pixel with its nearest neighbors and larger values mix more distant pixels. The contribution from each pixel decreases with distance, so the nearest pixels have the greatest contribution. This function is useful to smooth mottled skin tones. You can use "select area" to limit the blur to a face or part of a face. This is also a way to cure "banding" in sky areas (this can happen if image retouch functions cause the distribution to spread out, making the brightness steps perceptible).


Reduce Noise

This function reduces the noise present in photos taken under poor lighting conditions, making uniform surfaces appear speckled. You may choose among the methods provided, and mixing them (using one and then another) is often helpful. When an [apply] buttons is pressed, the corresponding noise reduction method is applied to the image, using the corresponding adjustable setting (radius or threshold). Each new [apply] uses the modified image from the previous [apply], so each use will have increasing impact. With a large image, these algorithms may run a long time. To save time, select a small area and experiment with the different methods and settings until you make a decision, then clear the selected area and apply the chosen method(s) to the whole image.

Here is a short technical description of each method:
 
 Flatten Outliers 1 The highest and lowest pixel values within a radius are moderated slightly.
 Flatten Outliers 2 Pixels are compared to the mean and sigma of pixels within a radius.
Those outside one sigma are moved slightly back toward the mean.
 Median Brightness Pixels are set to the median value of their neighbors within a radius.
 Top Hat Detect outliers by comparison with a band of pixels at a distance.
The distance is increased in steps from 1 pixel to the radius limit.
 Wavelets Image brightness (with noise) over distance is converted into a series of wave functions that nearly sum to brightness and represent an approximation with less noise.

The wavelets algorithm was adapted from code found in a Gimp plug-in.
The first version was written by Dave Coffin for the program Dcraw.


Smart Erase

This function can be used to erase small objects that can spoil a good photo, such as power lines, trash on the ground, a sign, etc. The unwanted object is replaced with pixels taken from the surrounding area. This is sometimes very effective (side-effects almost invisible), and sometimes not. It works best for small or narrow objects in the photo (e.g. <20 pixels wide). Radius controls the size of a circle around the mouse pointer, defining the area to select and erase. Drag the mouse to enclose all or part of the object to be removed. Left-drag selects and right-drag un-selects. Press [Erase] to erase the selected area, replacing the pixels with the nearest pixels from outside the selection. If the selection was not precise enough, use [Undo], adjust the selected area, and [Erase] again. Repeated selections and erasures will accumulate until you use [New_Area] to start a new selection. The prior erased areas are now fixed and [Undo] will only work for the current selection. As with all edit functions, the toolbar buttons [Undo] and [Redo] can be used to review all changes. It is likely best to work with an image zoomed to 200% or more. The Blur control adds blur to the replacement pixels. This can reduce visible side-effects, since the replacement pixels may be sharper or have more contrast than the surroundings. Change the Blur setting and repeat the [Erase] button. A blur of 0.5 or 1 pixel is usually effective. The [show] and [hide] buttons can be used to show the outline of the current selection or hide it to better judge the results after erasing.


Remove Red Eye
This function reduces the red-eye effect from electronic flash photos. Two methods are provided. The first is faster but may not handle difficult cases. The second method is more robust but also needs more time and care. To use the first function, left-click on a red-eye one or more times until satisfied. If the darkened area is too small or off-center, do a right-click to undo the change and then left-click more precisely on the center of the red-eye. If a red-eye cannot be fixed correctly, right-click to undo the change and then use the second method. The second method can better handle difficult cases where the red-eye is only slightly red and the color difference with the eyelids is too little for the automatic algorithm to distinguish. Place the cursor over the center of the red eye. Hold the left mouse button and drag the cursor down and to the right. A dotted ellipse will appear enclosing the red eye. Repeat if needed to get the red eye centered in the ellipse (roughly). Note that the shape of the ellipse depends on the direction of the drag, which can allow more precise enclosure of only the red-eye. Left-click inside the ellipse repeatedly while watching the red eye darken, and stop when it is dark enough. If you go too far, the eyelids may start to darken. Right-click to undo and repeat if necessary.
 

Paint / Clone

This function changes individual pixels by painting them with the mouse.
If a select area is enabled, the painting is confined within the area.

Paint Color
The color button allows you to pick a color, and shows the current color. You can also shift + left-click on the image to choose a color from the image. The "paintbrush radius" control sets a circle around the mouse pointer which shows the area being painted or erased. Left drag on the image to paint with the current color. Right drag over a previously painted area to erase (gradually undo the painting). The "transparency" controls determine how intensely the color is applied (or erased) at the center and edges of the circle. Zero transparency applies the full color immediately whereas a high transparency (90+) allows you to gradually change the color using multiple drags (analogous to spray painting from a distance). Erase also works this way: use zero transparency to immediately erase, and high transparency to erase gradually.

NOTE: zoom the image to 100% or more when using a small brush. If the mouse steps are larger than the image pixels and a small brush is being used, some pixels may be skipped by the mouse and cannot be painted.

Copy From Image (clone)
Instead of one fixed color for all pixels within the paintbrush radius, pixels are taken from somewhere else in the image. Shift + left click on the image to select the source area, then drag on the area to paint. The source area is painted over the dragged area. The transparency controls work as described above. This method can be used to erase an unwanted object, replacing it with background taken from elsewhere.

The [undo-last] button removes the last paint or erase operation, and this can be repeated to remove many recent edits. Each new drag operation is a unit of work that can be separately erased. The memory for undo operations is limited to one gigabyte, which can be reached if you make many edits using a large brush (every change to every pixel is saved). It is useful to save the image after each satisfactory change to free this memory. The amount of memory available is displayed in the dialog, so you can see when the limit is approaching.

The gradual paint option is the most useful and functions as already described. If you de-select this option, painting and erasing will be sudden instead of gradual. If you are painting within a select area with edge blending, the painted changes will be zero at the edges and 100% for pixels beyond "blend width" from the edges. This works better if "gradual paint" is not selected.


Remove Dust

Images made from dusty scanned slides can have many small dark spots - shadows of the dust on the slides. This function can be used to remove the majority of such spots. Move the three sliders until the maximum number of dust spots are painted red, then press the [erase] button to erase them. Press [red] to bring back the red view, then you can adjust the sliders again and press [erase]. The "spot size limit" slider limits the size of the spots that will be erased. The "max. brightness" slider sets a threshold for ignoring spots that are not dark enough. The "min. contrast" slider screens out spots having low contrast with their surroundings. This process is usually a compromise. If the settings are not optimal, small features like tree leaves can be erased, or large spots may be left in place. Different parts of the image may need different settings, e.g. sky can be treated more aggressively than a building wall. You can simply use Erase Dust multiple times with different settings as needed to get all the dust spots. Or you can use select area to process the image in sections. If some spots are persistent, you can treat them manually with Smart Erase: set a small mouse radius and click on each spot to remove it. Spots from fibers (long and thin) are usually not removed automatically, but Smart Erase can be effective here.


Anti-alias Tool

This function can reduce pixelation (aka "jaggies" or "stair steps") in a low-resolution image. Press the [apply] button to make the change, then [done]. The result is sharper than using the Blur function. The resulting image is 2x the size of the original. It may be useful to apply sharpening afterwards.

Note:
this tool is only effective for pixelation with single-pixel "steps". If the image has been resized larger (steps are larger than 1 pixel) the algorithm does not work. It thinks the steps are legitimate because they are big. Pixelation in photos normally occurs only when a photo has been downsized and then upsized. Pixelation is not a problem with normal photography - lens blur is larger than the camera sensor pixels.



Fix Color Fringes

This function is used to reduce chromatic abberation. Look carefully at the left photo, taken from inside a church. It has color fringes that were mostly eliminated in the processed image to the right (these images are 400% size and not very sharp). Color fringes can appear along high-contrast edges, especially in the outer image areas where lens distortions are usually greatest. To get rid of them, zoom the image to a maximum size and center on an area with color fringes. Move the slider controls slowly while watching the image, and leave them where the color fringes are minimized. To speed up the response time, select a small area first (Area > Select) , optimize the color fringes in this area, then remove the area before pressing [done] so that the entire image will get the final corrections. The corrections are scaled so that the maximum correction is at the image edges and the correction at the center is zero.


Fix Stuck Pixels (always bright or dark)

Camera sensors may have defects causing isolated pixels to be always bright or always dark. This may be one RGB color or all of them. I have seen a case where a group of 3x3 pixels was always too red. This function can find such pixels in an image and repair them by substituting neighboring pixels.

Select the defect sizes to search for: 1 pixel, 4 pixels in a 2x2 block, or 9 pixels in a 3x3 block. The defects found are surrounded by small circles which you can toggle between write, black and red. Zoom-in to inspect these and determine if they are real defects. Use the contrast control to precisely select the defects. If set too low, small high-contrast spots in the image may be erroneously selected. If set too high, real defects may be missed. Use the [apply] button to erase the defects in the current image. You can apply the function many times using different settings if needed.

The currently shown (encircled) defective pixels can be saved to a file by using the [save] button. This file can be used later to fix the defects in any image made by the same camera: use the [open] button, select the saved defects file, then use the [apply] button to fix the current image. Using a saved defects file from one image to fix the defects in another image will only work if the two images have never been trimmed, or if exactly the same trim was applied to both images. This is necessary because the defective pixels in the two images must have the same locations. If more than one contrast setting or pixel group selection is needed to accurately find all the defects in one image, you can save the respective defect files and combine them manually into one file. Use any text editor for this.

I suggest you make a test images to find defects: Make a photo of a paper sheet or blank wall that is underexposed to come out gray. This image can be used to find both bright and dark stuck pixels.



Color Menu
 

Shift Colors

This function converts an image into false colors. Choose any of the three RGB colors and move the slider left or right from the center. One of the two other colors will be substituted in a graduated manner, reaching 100% replacement at the slider end positions. For example, you can gradually substitute green or blue for the color red. The "All" slider shifts all colors together. Do this first to find a first optimum, then shift the RGB colors individually.
 

Color Mode
Use this function to make a black and white or color negative, or convert a negative image into a positive image, or convert to sepia coloring (a modified black/white conversion for an aged photo effect).

Select one of the four buttons:
    black/white positive - convert a color image to black and white
    black/white negative - convert to black and white and reverse brightness
    color positive - do nothing at all, or undo one of the others
    color negative - replace each RGB color with its compliment
    sepia - convert to a modified black and white for an aged photo effect

Color negative: Each RGB color is replaced with the maximum value - the color value. For example, if the RGB colors (% of maximum) are 20/40/60, then the negative color is 80/60/40. Doing this twice brings back the original colors. This produces complimentary colors as follows: red becomes cyan, green becomes magenta, and blue becomes yellow.

Sepia: This is like a conversion to black and white, but a shade of brown called sepia is added to the shades of gray. This makes a photo look like a very old photo from the early days of photography. Many cameras and photo edit programs have this feature.


Color Profile
Use this function to change from the normal sRGB color profile to some other RGB color profile. If you have images with Adobe RGB color, you can change them to sRGB for display on a monitor using sRGB (normally the case). You may need to install ICC color profiles. In Ubuntu, the package names are "icc-profiles" and "icc-profiles-free".


Match Colors

This function matches the colors in one image to those in another. A small spot, determined from a mouse click, is sampled from each image. The spot on the 2nd image will be made to have the same average color (RGB values) as the spot from the 1st image. The factors used to make the RGB values the same are then applied to all the pixels in the 2nd image. The most common use is to remove a color-cast from an image by marking a spot on the image that should have a given color which was taken from another image.

Procedure: The dialog lists 5 steps to take in sequence. (1) Set a radius for the spot sample. The mouse cursor will have a circle of this radius which is the spot area that will be sampled. (2) Open the 1st image (press the [open] button for a file open dialog). If the current image is already the one you want, this step can be skipped. (3) Click on the image to take a color sample from the spot area enclosed by the mouse circle. You can change the radius and click again if wanted. (4) Open the 2nd image by pressing the [open] button. (5) Click on the image at the spot you want to match the spot color from the 1st image. The image colors will change within a second or two. You can change the radius and click on another spot if wanted, and the colors will change accordingly. Click the dialog [done] or [cancel] button to finish.


Revise RGB
This function can be used to make complex color corrections, whereby different parts of the image need different corrections. Select up to 9 control points on the image by clicking them with the mouse. The points are added to the list in the dialog window, with the most recent point at the top. The points are labeled A-I in the list and on the image window. The current RGB values are shown (or EV or OD units if selected). Change the RGB/EV/OD values in the dialog, and the image will be changed to match. Each pixel in the image is influenced by all the control points in the dialog, with the closer control points having more influence than those farther away. The slider Blend determines how widely the control points spread their influence. If "delta" is checked, the values shown are the deltas (differences) from the original image.


CMYK

This function is used to change overall brightness and contrast, or that of selected colors. The settings are retained within and across Fotoxx sessions, so this function can be used to process multiple photos made under the same lighting conditions and needing the same (or nearly) adjustments. Use the [reset] button to restore all inputs to neutral values.
  

 Brightness  Increase or decrease overall image brightness
+Red - Cyan
 etc.
 Increase or decrease the brightness of one RGB color
 and change complimentary colors in the opposite direction
 Contrast
 Increase or decrease the overall image contrast
 Red, etc.
 Increase or decrease the contrast of individual RGB colors



Bend Menu


Unbend Image

Panoramas of nearby subjects (typically buildings or interior rooms) may show straight lines that are curved, or buildings that are slanted. Bending of the images is necessary in the panorama process in order for the images to fit together. For landscapes this may not be noticeable. The unbend function can be used to straighten the image. Vertical and horizontal dotted lines are drawn over the image, showing the unbend axes. Click or drag the mouse near the end of a line to move it. Input values for horizontal and vertical unbend and watch the effect on the image. Increase or decrease the values and repeat until satisfied. Move the axes to change the centers of unbending. The linear values will slant the image left/right or top/bottom edges to remove slant. The curved values will straighten the image curving that comes from making a panorama. See also "Warp Image" for another method of correcting image curving and perspective.


Keystone Correction

This function can be used to straighten a photo made from an offset angle. The painting on the left is the original photo, taken from below and left of center, to reduce reflections. The painting on the right is the straightened version. This function can also be used to straighten a building photographed from below or from the side.

Click on the four corners of the tetragon shape that you want to make into a rectangle (in the above case, the four corners of the painting or frame), then select [apply]. Use [reset] to go back and try again if needed. The clicked corners are labeled with small letters A, B, C, D. The upper left corner of the square enclosing the letter precisely marks the corner position. Clicking near a corner will move it to the new position. After the 4th corner is defined, a new click replaces the closest corner.


Flatten Book Page

This function can flatten a photographed page from a book. If the book is thick, the pages bend downward at the binding, and the photographed text is squeezed together. This function straightens the top and bottom edges of the page and unsqueezes the text.

Photo Procedure
First, make the photo as good as possible to minimize the needed corrections. The page curvature can be reduced by holding the book half-opened. Place the camera over the center of the page, so that the top and bottom edge curves look roughly equal. Use lots of illumination to increase the depth of field, to insure the curved-down part of the page remains in sharp focus. Two persons working together can photograph 1-2 pages per minute.

Fotoxx Procedure
First, trim the image, keeping all of the page but little more. Rotate the page if needed. Start the Flatten function. Click the mouse along the top edge, creating visible dots at the clicked points. After 4+ points are available, a curved line is drawn through the points. Add more points and drag the points as needed to make the line conform closely to the page edge. Repeat for the bottom edge. Press [flatten] to flatten the page. The edges should now be straight (or straight enough). The text near the binding is still squeezed together. Unsqueeze the text by pulling the top and bottom sliders. The text is spread out in a way that is proportional the the slope of the top and bottom page edges, so the area near the binding is stretched the most. The [undo] button restores the unmodified image and the edited dots, which can now be adjusted.


Warp an Image (distort)


Warp area
This function can be used to make distortions within an image. You can select an image area and drag the mouse to stretch this area with respect to the rest of the image. The image is like rubber. If the mouse drag begins within the selected area, then the area is warped within its current boundaries - the movement is maximum at the mouse pointer and declines to zero at the edges of the selected area. If the mouse drag begins outside the selected area, the area edges near the mouse can be pulled out beyond the original area boundary. Many mouse drags of different lengths and directions can be combined to achieve the desired results. When finished, you can select another area and do some more warping, or select [done] to exit the function. The method used limits loss of resolution from repeated warps: for each warp step, the total movement of each pixel is accumulated and the original image is warped to the latest pixel positions. The pixels are interpolated to reduce jaggies and improve sharpness.


Warp curved
This function is useful to correct perspective problems (see also Unbend). Drag the image from any position, using the mouse. The entire image will be pulled or pushed in the direction of the mouse, but areas near the mouse are moved more than more distant areas. You can straighten curved lines or deliberately curve the image. The control [warp span] determines the radius of warping around the mouse. 1.0 means the full image is warped, and smaller values confine the warp to smaller areas around the mouse.


Warp linear
This function is useful to correct perspective problems (see also Unbend). Drag the image from any position, using the mouse. The entire image will be pulled or pushed in the direction of the mouse, but areas near the mouse are moved more than more distant areas. You can straighten curved lines or deliberately curve the image. This function works over a broader area than the curved warp and causes less image curvature. To minimize the addition of curvature, pull only on the image corners.


Warp affine
This function can be used to warp an image in interesting ways. Drag the image from a corner or edge using the mouse. The changes are purely linear so straight lines remain straight. This transform is called "affine". Technical details can be found with Google.




Effects Menu


Color Depth
This function changes the normal 16 bits per RGB color (red, green, blue) to any value between 1 and 16 bits per color. At 8 bits per color, there are 16.8 million total color combinations. At 4 bits per color there are only 4096 total colors. Use 1-4 bits for an interesting "poster" effect.


Sketch

This function transforms a photo into something like a pencil sketch. Dark pixels are aggregated into fewer pixels, leaving vacated areas brighter. Contrast can also be used as a proxy for dark pixels. "Threshold" can be used to filter the input image by brightness. "Clip Level" is used to filter the output to further reduce isolated or marginally dark pixels. The Negative checkbox causes black and white to be interchanged. Two algorithms are provided - results may look more interesting with one or the other (subjective). Reducing the size of the input image may also give more interesting results.


Drawing

This function transforms a photo into a line drawing showing outlines of objects within the image. Edges (sharp transitions in brightness or color) in the image are brightened, and the rest of the image is darkened.

There are three sliding controls. Outline threshold: how bright an edge must be in order to get enhanced, from "show no edges" at the low end to "show all edges" (even faint ones) at the high end. Outline width: width of the enhanced edges, from 1-pixel to about 5 pixels. Image brightness: brightness of the image itself, from dark (show only the outlines) to full brightness. The black/white checkbox converts the image from color to black and white, and the negative checkbox makes a negative image (colors are replaced with their compliments).


Graduated Blur


This is another function to blur an image, but it works differently. In the dialog, you specify a contrast limit and a blur radius. Only pixels with less contrast than the given limit are blurred, and the blur radius ranges from 1 to the given value for pixels with a corresponding contrast ranging from the given limit to zero. In short: low contrast pixels are blurred more than high contrast pixels. This can be used, for example, to smooth skin tones without blurring hair or reducing the sparkel in the eyes. Taken to extremes, it produces a "cartoon" effect, especially when used in combination with other retouch and effects functions.


Embossing
This function transforms a photo into a simulated relief or embossed image. The "radius" setting determines the feature size or level of detail. The "depth" setting determines how deep the features go into the surface.


Tiles
This function transforms a photo into an array of large monocolor tiles. You can control the tile size and the thickness of the gap between tiles. This is also called "pixelate" or "pixelize". Use Select Area to confine the transform to a limited area, such as a face.


Dots

This function transforms a photo into a array of dots, like a comic book picture or Roy Lichtenstein painting. The only control is the dot size. Also experiment with using color saturation, color depth, or other functions before and after using Dots.


Painting
This function transform a photo into something looking more like a painting. It reduces the number of colors, maps each contiguous pixel area having the same color, and then consolidates smaller areas into adjacent larger areas having the best color match.

Four user settings control this process: "color depth" sets the number of colors to be used (bits per RGB color). 1 = 8 colors, 2 = 64 colors ... 5 = 32768 colors;  "patch area goal" sets a lower limit for areas that will have their own color: areas smaller than this number of pixels will be absorbed into an adjacent area with the nearest color match; "req. color match" sets the minimum color match required for a smaller area to be consolidated into an adjacent larger area: 0 = don't care (maximum consolidation), 100 = perfect match required (no consolidation); "borders" determines whether the colored areas will be delineated with a thin black border, like irregular tiles in a mosaic. After using this function, using the Embossing function can add interesting texture to the image.
 

Vignette
This function is used to highlight or colorize an object or area within an image.


Click or drag the mouse on the image to change the vignette center, which is initially at the center of the image.

Select Brightness to change the brightness of the image in a radial pattern: Adjust the left or right end of the curve to change the brightness of the center and edges of the image respectively. You can give a dark surround to a portrait face, or you can fix an image with darkened corners. The curve middle level corresponds to no change. Use lower values to darken and higher values to brighten. The example above gradually darkens the periphery of the image while leaving a broad central area unchanged.

Select Color to add a chosen color to the image in a radial pattern. Curve values of zero (at the bottom of the box) represent no change, and higher values add the chosen color to the image. The amount is regulated by the curve value. The highest value (top) corresponds to 100% color. Use this function to add a color surround to an image, e.g. surround a face with a gradually increasing color.


Texture
This function adds a textured surface to an image or selected areas within an image. Radius determines the texture pattern size. Strength determines the intensity of the pattern, from almost invisible to dominant.


Pattern
Add a background pattern to an image. A small image file (pattern file) is used to cover the current image (base image) by duplicating the file, like a tiled floor. This file can be a real pattern (e.g. an image of canvas cloth, a brick wall, a repeating geometry ...), or any other kind of image. The pattern is made semi-transparent, so that the base image appears to be printed over the pattern, or the pattern over the image. Many pattern files can be found using a Google search for "pattern image". Download some of these and trim them if needed to a size around 200-500 pixels. LibreOffice background patterns are another good source. You can save them anywhere in your image collection.

Use the [Choose] button to select a pattern file. The [Apply] button will duplicate the pattern to cover the base image. The pattern is partly transparent so that the base image shows through. Adjust the Power setting and use [Apply] again until you have the right mix of base image and pattern.

Width and Height are initially set to the size of the pattern file. You can adjust these smaller, which will cause less of the pattern to be used for duplication. If the pattern file contains an image that repeats at fixed intervals both horizontally and vertically, the [Find] button can be used to set width and height to match this image. The result will be a continuous pattern without discontinuities.

If the pattern is irregular and joints are visible where the duplicated patterns are joined, you may be able to improve this. Use width and height to revise what part of the pattern image is used. The two overlap values determine how much the duplicated patterns overlap at the edges, horizontally and vertically. Add some overlap to mask the edge effects.

Select Area can be used to apply a pattern to part of an image, or different patterns to different parts. After applying a pattern to an image, it might be interesting to use Embossing or Tone Mapping to add a 3-D effect to the pattern.


Mosaic
Create a mosaic image using tiles made from all your images.


Specify the tile size in pixels (e.g. 36 x 24) and press [Tiles]. Tiles will be created from all of your images (actually the thumbnail images are used since their small size makes the process run much faster). This may take some time (speed is about 11K images/min. using a slow 5400 rpm disk). If you change the tile dimensions, press [Tiles] again to regenerate the tiles. This may work much faster since the images have been cached in memory by the OS. The generated tiles are saved to a file and loaded again the next time the Mosaic function is used. Regenerate the tiles only when new images have been added to your collection or if you change the tile size.

After the tiles are created, press [Image] to convert the current image into a mosaic using these tiles. This takes only a few seconds. You can process additional images without regenerating the tiles. Tiles are chosen by matching the average tile color to the average image color at the tile position. If thousands of images are available and if the range of colors is good enough, the mosaic will turn out quite good. Use the mouse wheel (or CTRL+left click) to zoom-in on any part of the image to see the tile images.

The Tile blending slider will cause the image to be blended with the tiles, making it look better if the tiles are a bad color match. If the blending is less than about 50%, the tiles remain almost as clear as before (the eye compensates the false tint).

After a mosaic is created, you can click on any tile to get a larger popup image. This is the full image for the tile, so you can drag the window as large as you like and it will remain sharp. A mosaic image can be saved like any other edited image, but if a saved mosaic is opened, clicking the tiles for a bigger image does not work. Regenerating the mosaic is quite fast, so do this if you want the popups to work.



Combine Menu


High Dynamic Range Image (HDR)
Combine (overlay) multiple images of the same subject with different exposure levels. The combined image can show improved visibility of detail in both the darker and brighter areas, in effect using pixels from the brighter images for the darker areas, and from the darker images for the brighter areas. Many digital cameras do exposure bracketing: take multiple shots in quick succession with different exposure levels. You can combine such images to make a better one. If the camera is adjusted manually between shots, take care to keep it level and aim at the same distant point. Some misalignment of the two images can be tolerated. If things move between shots, ghosting cannot be avoided.

Select the HDR menu function and select up to 9 images, which must all have nearly the same pixel dimensions. The images are aligned and combined automatically. This needs 10 seconds to a minute or more per image, depending on image size and CPU speed. When done, the combined image is shown, along with a dialog for manual adjustments. The contributions from the input images are shown as a series of editable curves. The horizontal scale represents pixel brightness, from dark to bright. Each curve represents an image which contributes to the pixels. The image contribution at a given brightness level is proportional to the height of its curve at that level. The initial curve for the brightest image will be high on the left and low on the right, meaning a high contribution to dark pixels and a low contribution to bright pixels. The darkest image will be low on the left and high on the right, and the remaining images will be in-between. The curves can be edited by dragging them with the mouse. The corresponding image contributions are changed accordingly, and you can see the results in quasi-real-time in the output image. In general, the brightest image should have a higher contribution to the darker pixels, and the darkest image a higher contribution to the brighter pixels. You will likely need practice to become effective at working the curves. A faster and easier alternative may work as well: after the images are combined, ignore the curves and exit from HDR. Use various edit functions to refine the image: Brightness Distribution, Retouch Combo, and Tone Mapping. Select Area can be used to enclose any area in the image which needs more brightness, color, or local contrast, so you can apply different methods and parameters to different areas.


High Depth of Field Image (HDF)
Combine (overlay) multiple photos of the same subject with different focus settings from near to far. Different parts of the subject are in sharp focus in each image. Combine the images so that all parts of the subject are sharp. This technique is most useful for extreme close-ups.

Making the photos: choose a point for the center of the image. Aim the camera at a near object and depress the shutter button 1/2 way to set the focus on this object. Hold the button at the 1/2 position, aim the camera at the chosen center, and snap the photo. Now choose a farther object and do the same. Repeat with increasing focus distance. Hopefully each part of the subject is sharp in at least one photo. The camera position should be very nearly the same for all photos, which can be a challenge when the subject is very close. Camera movement can cause scaling and parallax problems (nearer objects shifted against farther objects). Such problems may be fixable later in Fotoxx, but this may require considerable time. It is better to avoid the problems.
 
Processing the photos: in Fotoxx, choose the HDF menu function and select up to 9 images. The images will now be aligned as well as possible. This needs 10 seconds to a minute or more per image, depending on image size and CPU speed. The output image is an even mix of the aligned input images. A small amount of camera movement between the photos is compensated, but this is limited, and parallax shifts are not compensated at all. When the alignment is complete, a dialog opens. You can select any input image and "paint" with the mouse on any area of the output image. This converts the original image mix to the selected image for the area being painted. For each area or object in the image, choose an input image that is sharp in that area. The radius of the paintbrush can set larger or smaller, so you can paint large areas quickly and control fine detail when needed. If you have overlapping near and far objects, time and patience will be needed to make all of them sharp. Misalignments can be corrected by selecting the "warp" option in the dialog. The underlying images can then be dragged and warped with the mouse, and the composite output image is changed accordingly. The warp is limited to the area around the mouse. When a painted area is dragged, the corresponding image is automatically selected and dragged, while areas painted with other images remain fixed. Areas that have not been painted cannot be dragged. Move around to different areas and make incremental drags until all areas are aligned. 

Suggested Workflow: Using paint mode, choose each image in sequence and paint all areas that look sharp with that image. Any boundaries that are not well-aligned will show up clearly as shifts in the edges of objects in the image. Some of these can be made unimportant by changing the image used for painting (if more than one image is sharp enough). Using warp mode, make fine adjustments as needed to eliminate visible shifts.


Stack / Paint
Combine (overlay) multiple photos of the same subject taken at different times. Remove tourists and cars that come and go between shots by painting them away with the mouse.

Making the photos: Aim the camera at the same distant point and take multiple photos as tourists or cars move in front of the subject. Try to get at least one photo with each part of the subject not obscured by the moving objects.

Processing the photos: In Fotoxx, choose the Stack / Paint menu function and select up to 9 images. The images will now be aligned as well as possible. This needs 10 seconds to a minute or more per image, depending on image size and CPU speed. The output image is an even mix of the aligned input images. When the alignment is complete, a dialog opens. You can select any input image and "paint" with the mouse on any area of the output image. This converts the original image mix to the selected image for the area being painted. For each area in the image, choose an input image that is free from the moving objects. The radius of the paintbrush can set larger or smaller, so you can paint large areas quickly and control fine detail when needed.


Stack / Noise
This function combines 2-9 images (photos) of the same subject. The photos should be nearly the same, except for small offsets caused by a hand-held camera. If the photos were made with a very high ISO setting (low light conditions), the pixels will have considerable noise. By making many photos and averaging them, the noise can be mostly eliminated.
Making the photos: Choose a point for the center of the image. Take several photos using the same center and being careful not to shift or rotate the camera too much. The more photos the better. Up to nine can be used with Fotoxx, but you can take more in order to have some to discard if they are not sharp, a common problem with low light conditions and long exposure times.

In Fotoxx, chose the Stack / Noise function and select up to nine images. They will be combined automatically and shown, and then a dialog will open. The initial output image is a combination of all the selected input images, averaged together. This means that the RGB values for each output pixel are the average of the RGB values for the corresponding input pixels. A few alternative tools can be used to possibly reduce the remaining noise a little more. The "use median" button will change the output pixels from an average of the input pixels to the median of the input pixels (1-3 "middle" RGB values are averaged, depending on the number of images). This may or may not be better, so switch back and forth to compare (the screen update may need several seconds). The checkboxes for "omit low pixel" and "omit high pixel" will cause the lowest and highest RGB input values to be discarded before the average is calculated. This may help to get noise spikes removed from the mix. This has no effect if the median method is selected.


Panorama Image
This function stitches 2-4 images together to make a wide image or panorama. The images must overlap by 15% or more, so that the program can find where they coincide and put them together. Start the panorama menu function and select 2-4 image files. The images are initially joined and shown with a small transparent overlap. A pre-align dialog asks you to drag the images into rough alignment. Drag the images into the correct left to right order. The image to drag may overlap other images. To be clear about which image is being dragged, drag from near the center of the image. After the images are in the correct order, align each image to its left neighbor. It works best to proceed from left to right. Move an image horizontally and vertically into rough alignment with its neighbor to the left, then rotate the image if needed by dragging its bottom edge left or right. The image pivots around the mid-point of its overlap with the image to the left. The fastest method is to align the overlap middle region first, then rotate the right image if needed to bring the upper and lower overlap regions into alignment. Extreme accuracy is not needed. Use the [resize] button to get a bigger combined image after moving them closer together. The images should be correctly curved and fit together well. If they do not, then the lens mm parameter (focal length, 35mm equivalent) needs adjustment. The curvature of the images changes as lens mm is adjusted. The initial value is obtained from the EXIF data if available, and this is normally good enough. The lens bow parameter (barrel or pincushion distortion) is not available in EXIF and must be adjusted manually, but this is often insignificant and can be left at zero. You can measure and set the lens parameters manually as described below.

If an image was trimmed so that the greater dimension (width or height) was reduced, then the EXIF focal length is no longer valid, and the EXIF initial value may not work well. A section of an image taken from the middle has an effective focal length greater than the original. Use the pre-align dialog to increase the lens mm parameter until the images fit together reasonably well.

If the images have no curvature (e.g. scanned or downloaded images), use the "no curve" checkbox to set the lens mm effectively to infinity.

Press [proceed] when pre-alignment is finished, and the program will do fine alignment and join the images. Internally, the images are shifted and rotated and the degree of match is evaluated. This is done with increasing image sizes until the best match is found within a fraction of a pixel. This needs 10 seconds to a minute or more per image, depending on image size and CPU speed. When fine alignment is complete, the combined image is displayed. A dialog pops up for fine adjustment of brightness and color match. You may see a sharp border between images if the images do not have the same brightness and color balance. The [auto color] button can be used to perform an automatic color match, which is often satisfactory by itself. The other controls allow you to make additional changes to better match the images. Select one of the images with the radio buttons at the top, change the values for brightness and color, and press the [apply] button to see the results. Use [auto color] to match the other images to the one changed. Use [file color] to restore the original values from the input images. The "blend width" input governs how the images are blended together: at the image joints, the color balance is gradually shifted over this many pixels, to mask imbalances that cannot be fully corrected. The default is 1 pixel, which makes any brightness or color differences look obvious.

When done, you can use unbend, warp, trim/rotate and other functions for final adjustments. Use the auto-trim function at the end to automatically get rid of any leftover black margins.

Vertical Panorama
This function works the same as horizontal panorama, except that the images are arranged vertically. To change the order of the images, drag them from near their centers. To rotate an image, drag the right edge up or down. It is best to align from the top down.

Scanned Images
Scanned images can be combined if there is enough overlap. Check "no curve" since there is no curvature in scanned images.

Panorama Limitations
Panoramas including nearby objects can be tricky: when the photos are made, be careful to turn the camera on an axis through the lens, with minimum lateral movement, otherwise the images may align poorly because foreground objects are shifted against the background (parallax). This is not an issue when the subject is 50+ meters away, since a small lateral movement has little impact on the image.

Setting Lens Parameters Automatically
The [search] button in the panorama pre-alignment dialog initiates an automated search for optimum lens parameters. Use a suitable image pair: the subject is 50+ meters away, the images have a low horizon difference and little relative rotation, and there is plenty of high-contrast detail in the overlap area. Input your nominal lens focal length for lens_mm. Use zero for lens_bow. After doing a decent pre-align, press the [search] button and wait a while for the results. Do this a second time and observe the changes. If the values remain consistent, you can use them for your panoramas. The search function steps through a range of values for lens_mm, lens_bow, and the image alignment offsets for x, y, and theta. It searches for the lens values that give the best alignment results for the given images. The process needs a minute or more, but you only need to do this once to characterize a given camera lens.

Setting Lens Parameters Manually
Make a panorama image of a brick wall (or any wall with lots of detail). The wall should be 5+ meters away. Take two photos with about 40% overlap. Within the panorama pre-align process, adjust lens_mm and lens_bow until the overlapping bricks coincide. When making the two images, be sure to turn the camera on a vertical axis through the lens, minimizing lateral movement and rotation in other axes - otherwise the images may fit poorly and your lens parameters may not be optimal. The result should roughly correspond to the nominal focal length of your lens (35mm equivalent). It may be off somewhat (my 27mm lens works best with a lens_mm setting of 29-30mm). I speculate that this is because wide-angle camera lenses are not ideal lenses (pinhole equivalent). Most panoramas will still work OK even if the lens_mm setting is off by 10%.


Mashup
Arrange multiple images and text in a layout (photo montage). Images can be added, resized, rotated and moved around. Images can be made wholly or partially transparent, in whole or in selected areas. Text can be added, moved, resized and rotated. Text attributes can be specified: font, colors, outlines, shadows and transparencies. The example here shows some of the possibilities.

In the first Mashup dialog, choose a background or layout image where other images will be placed. Choose an existing image or create a new monotone image with a specified size and color. You may also open a previously saved mashup project and continue editing. The 2nd Mashup dialog is a choice: edit images, edit text, save the mashup project for later revision, save the completed composite image (Done) or abandon the image (Cancel). The first two choices lead to the Edit Images or the Edit Text dialog. Each of these go back to the 2nd dialog when done, so you can add or modify images and text in any sequence.

The Edit Images dialog is for choosing and placing images on the layout. The Add button leads to a gallery file selection dialog (link). Selected images are placed on the layout. Click on an image to select it, and use the Size, Angle, Transparency, and Edge Blend controls to adjust the image. Drag the image from its approximate midpoint to reposition the image in the layout. The dialog controls operate on the last image added, clicked or dragged. Images can overlap with adjustable transparencies controlled by Base Transparency for the whole image, and Edge Blend to blend the edges into the background. Remove an image by clicking it and pressing Delete. The Paint button leads to the dialog shown immediately underneath Edit Images. Click on an image to select it. The mouse will have a circle around it to show the range of action. Use radius to adjust the size of the circle. Left-drag the mouse over the image to make it transparent in the areas covered by the circle. Right-drag to make it opaque. If Gradual is checked, transparency changes are made slowly as the mouse is dragged. Specify a power value for the mouse center and edges to make the changes faster or slower. When done editing images, press Done to return to the 2nd Mashup dialog.

The Edit Text dialog is for placing text on the layout. Enter some text and press Add. The text is placed on the layout. Drag it into position, then use the dialog controls to set font, size, color, angle, background color, outline size and color, shadow size and color, and transparencies for each of these. Drag the text to a new position at any time. Click on any existing text to show its properties in the dialog and revise them. Click on a text and press Delete to remove it. When done editing, press Done to return to the 2nd Mashup dialog.

You can also enter images saved by Select Area. Navigate to the directory
    /home/<user>/.fotoxx/saved_areas
and open any of the .tiff images found there. These have the outline of the selected area and are transparent outside this edge. Note that you need to select "show hidden files" in Tools > User Settings in order to see the hidden directory ".fotoxx".

You can use the mouse to move images and text, resize larger or smaller, and rotate.
 + drag from the center to move an image or text to another position in the layout
 + drag the lower right corner of an image or text to resize or rotate:
     + to rotate, drag in an arc around the image or text center
     + to resize an image, drag out from the center or drag in to the center
     + other corners will also work, but not as well

The keyboard arrow keys can also be used to move the currently selected image or text image in 1-pixel steps.

Mashup project files
You can save a project and open it later to continue editing. However, the project file will open successfully only if the layout image and all the overlay images are still available in their original locations. The Mashup project is rebuilt using these images and some saved metadata that is in the project file: image and text locations, scales, transparency information, etc.




Plugins Menu

Other image edit programs (e.g. Gimp) can be added to this menu. They will then work like an edit function in Fotoxx. After using one of these external programs to modify an image, you can use the Fotoxx [Undo] and [Redo] buttons to check the results, perform additional edits with Fotoxx, or use [Save] to save the edited image. The image passed by Fotoxx to the external program is a TIFF file with 16 bits per color. Most programs can read this file but may use only 8 bits. When finished using the external editor, save the image back to itself ("save" menu) and exit the program. Fotoxx will then pick up the revised file and use it as though the edit had been done in Fotoxx. Note that in Gimp you must use the File > Export menu to save the image back to the original input file ("save" produces an .xcf file).

To add a new plugin, use the function Plugins > Edit Plugins. Input a menu name and corresponding command in the Edit control and press the [Add] button. The format must be "menu name = command line". You can also remove a plugin by selecting it in the Select control and then pressing the [Remove] button. The Plugins menu will not be updated until the next time Fotoxx is started. The plugin menu is saved in a file: /home/<user>/.fotoxx/plugins  which you can manipulate with a text editor if desired. This is the only way to change the sequence of the menu entries. Be careful not to screw up the format.

Example: use the ImageMagick program (mogrify) as a Fotoxx command to adjust image gamma:
     auto-gamma = mogrify -auto-gamma




Help Menu
 
Quick Guide
This is a 1-page introductory document with Fotoxx essentials.

User Guide
The user guide (this document) is displayed (created using the WYSIWYG HTML editor Kompozer).

User Guide Changes
This is a summary of recent changes in the User Guide. The intent is to enable you to survey the changes without reading the whole document.

Edit Functions Summary
A one-page "quick reference" summary of the image edit functions is displayed.

README
Displays the README file distributed with Fotoxx, which may contain new information about installation or dependencies. When you install a new release of Fotoxx, you should look at README and the Change Log to check if there is anything special you need to be aware of.

Change Log
Displays the change log file distributed with Fotoxx, containing details about functional changes, additions, or bug fixes for the current and previous releases.

Translations
Displays a short text file which explains how to make a new translation or change an existing one. This involves editing a text file that contains English text messages with their corresponding translations.
See one of the existing translation files as an example, e.g. the German translation:
    /usr/share/fotoxx/locales/translate-de.po
A new translation for language code xx would be saved at:
    /usr/share/fotoxx/locales/translate-xx.po.
After making such a file, you can test it by starting Fotoxx in a terminal:
    $ fotoxx -lang xx.
Missing translations are also listed on the terminal window when Fotoxx starts.
Active translators are credited the the menu  Help > About.

Home Page
Shows the Fotoxx home page from the Internet. Look here for program updates (the page named "recent changes"). This page is published via RSS and you can subscribe to get timely notification of changes.

About
This displays a short message about the Fotoxx version number, license, credits, and contact address.




Organizing Images for Efficient Searching

The goal is to find all images for a given set of criteria, e.g. photos of a given person in a given place and time frame, or all photos of a given person at any time, or photos from specified locations, etc. There are several ways to organize an image collection to accomplish this, with advantages and disadvantages you need to understand. These methods may be used in any combination (I use all of them). Keep in mind that if you want to user other programs for searching images, you need to pay attention to which methods are compatible. Fotoxx is standards-compliant to avoid lock-in, but some other applications use unique methods.

Fotoxx can search using the following image attributes: photo date, rating (0-5 stars), tags (keywords), geotags (location names and earth coordinates), file directories and names, and text appearing in captions or comments. These are explained in the Edit Metadata, Edit Geotags, and Search Images topics. In addition, any metadata can be searched, although not nearly as fast as the previously listed items, which are kept in a special index file for fast searching. The Index Image Files function establishes this index and updates it when new image files are added or their locations are changed from outside Fotoxx.

The following is an attempt to give an overview of the options and tradeoffs.

Physical Organization
Directory and file names can be used as a basic organization that will enable you to find images even if more elaborate organizations (tags, collections, captions) are not used. The highest physical organization should be by time (not event, place, person, etc. IMO). I suggest using one subdirectory per year named 2001, 2002, etc. This will also prevent any one subdirectory from getting too big. The image files may further be organized in time sequence by using MM.DD as the start of the file name. The rest of the name can be a topic or event, and a sequence number.
    Example: /images/2011/08.20 Spitzbergen 23
This very basic organization allows Fotoxx to find files by searching file names. In the above example, a search for "spitzbergen" or even "spitz" will produce all the images of Spitzbergen. The function Tools > Batch Convert lets you rename a whole batch of photos taken on one day at one location or event by selecting the files and specifying a template name like "08.20 Spitzbergen ##". The sequence numbers are automatic, replacing ##.

Captions and Comments
A simple method of organization is to use captions and comments (Metadata > Edit Metadata). These are arbitrary text strings that can be added to a series of images in rapid sequence:
    open the first image, input some text, press [apply], press [next], input some text, ...
Captions and comments are two separate inputs but treated logically the same. They are searchable: words appearing in captions and comments can be searched for. You can specify persons, location, topic, etc. for each image and then find them again quickly. With this method, you can search images using any words appearing in captions or comments, in combination with dates and file names. Dates are taken from the automatic EXIF data from a digital camera. For other images, dates can be edited using the Edit Metadata function.

Tags
The most powerful tool is tags, but this is also the most demanding of organizational care. You can go through your images sequentially and add tags by clicking on a list of defined tags. New tags can be defined as needed. Images can have many tags, and can be searched for AND/OR combinations of tags (along with date, rating, file name, caption, comments). Tagging is the fastest way to classify a large collection, needing a few seconds per image. The hitch is the tagging system. You need to lay this out in advance and stick to it, otherwise things can get chaotic. If you end up with 1000 tags they will not be very useful. If the images are physically organized by time (the same order as they come out of the camera), then groups of images will tend to have the same tags, which makes the process of adding tags faster. There is also a batch function for adding the same tags to many images that you select by clicking thumbnails (link).

Geotags
Use geotags to assign a city (or national park, etc.) and country, and optionally latitude/longitude to your images. This enables all images for a location to be quickly found (or those near a location if latitude/longitude is used). If you use a camera with a GPS receiver and automatic geotagging, then location is in the image EXIF data and location searching is available automatically. Since image dates are also automatic (in EXIF), images can be searched by date range and location without you having to enter any data for each image. You can leave it at this, or add some of the above extras if you accept the extra effort required. My experience so far with automatic city/country via GPS is that the names are chaotic and you may want to sanitize them (upper/lower case, with/without states or other political subdivisions, fix mixed languages, etc.). You can fix the mess with a little effort: search for the location you want to change (e.g. München), then process the resulting images with the Batch Add Geotags function to change the location (e.g. Munich).

Collections
Another method of organization is to use named collections. Choose a name for each collection and assign any desired images to the collection, using basically two clicks per image (plus the time to find the images to add). The images are not duplicated. This method is independent of tags, captions, file names, etc. See Manage Collections. Collections can be selected by name and viewed directly as a gallery of thumbnails or sequentially in the main window.

Summary
The following table summarizes the options. Keep in mind that searching by date works with any of these methods, and you can combine the methods any way you wish, e.g. "directory and file names" together with "captions and comments".

Method and Example
 Advantages
 Disadvantages
Directory and File Names
e.g. image files like this:
   /images/2012/Rome-12.jpg
 + simple and easy to use
 + fast implementation: batch move/rename
    files with added sequence numbers

 + gallery overview at each level of hierarchy
 + easy to navigate up/down hierarchy levels
 + no overview of available search terms
 + long file names required for multiple search
    categories (time, place, persons, events ...)

 + risk of inconsistent naming and chaos
Captions and Comments
e.g. caption or comment like this:
   2012 Italy Rome Forum
 + simple and easy to use
 + flexible search using multiple categories
 + moderately fast implementation:
    think + write time, per image
 + no overview of available search terms
 + may end up with thousands of categories
 + risk of inconsistent naming and chaos
Tags (EXIF Keywords)
e.g. tags like this:
   italy, rome, forum, elizabeth
 + flexible search using multiple categories
 + moderately fast implementation:
    think time + one click per tag, per image
    (or batch add tags to a group of images)

 + good overview of available tags to click
    (organized by persons, places, events ...)

 + easy addition of new tags
 + requires careful planning of tags
 
+ slow to find and click tags if 200+ tags
 
+ hard to revise tag naming system
    (batch tag add/delete/replace available)
Geotags
e.g. location data like this:
   Rome Italy 41.89 N 12.48 E
 + cameras with GPS store data automatically
 + add locations in a few seconds per image
    (or batch add location to many images)

 + search location by clicking on a world map
 + search location and date-range by clicking
    on a report of available locations/dates
 + useful only for searching by location
 + chaotic location naming by cameras
    (revise using search and batch update)
Named Collections
e.g. collection names like this:
  +  best scenery
  +  Italy 2012
 + make ad hoc collections using any criteria
 + images can be in multiple collections
    or multiple times within one collection
 + time to locate and add images to collection
    (find and click gallery thumbnails)
 + images not searchable by other categories
 + not standards compliant



User Guide Changes
This section is provided to help you quickly review the changes without reading the whole manual. Fotoxx version numbers correspond to year and month of release.

v.14.03
v.14.02

v.14.01
v.13.12
v.13.11
v.13.10
v.13.09



Technical Notes

Fotoxx Limitations
  image files
 Fotoxx was tested with 87K image files and remained responsive (see benchmarks, below).
 500K image files should be practical on a strong computer.
  image size  The max. supported width or height is 20K pixels (compile time constant).
  image edits  99 edits for undo/redo and file version numbering (filename.v01 to filename.v99).
  geotag cities    20,000 different cities/locations for geotagged images (compile time constant).
  tags  There are limits listed in the topic Tags Overview.
 
Memory Limitations - running out of memory
Fotoxx can require a huge amount of main memory to edit a large image. A 20 megapixel image requires 720 megabytes for the simplest edits, and more for complex edits. Images in memory are not compressed and each RGB pixel is represented by three floating-point numbers. HDR, Panorama and other composite functions hold all images in memory during alignment and post-process tuning. If you push the memory limits on a small computer, the Linux OS may kill the Fotoxx process without warning and with no message (to keep the operating system itself from failing). What you see is that the Fotoxx window simply vanishes. Fotoxx itself watches memory and provides a popup message if memory is too low to continue. However, this message does not always get displayed because this itself requires memory, and Linux may kill the process instead.
 
Programs Required or Recommended for Fotoxx
Fotoxx requires the following libraries and programs to function at run time:
   xdg-utils open text or html files with user's preferred application
   exiftool (v. 8.60 or later) read and write image metadata (tags, comments, etc.) 
   dcraw batch convert RAW image files to tiff, jpeg, or png
   ufraw open a RAW image for editing using the ufraw GUI
   brasero burn a CD or DVD with selected images
  canberra
play sounds for slide show
   xgamma used for the Monitor Gamma function (adjust monitor gamma)
 
Packages Required for Fotoxx Source Build
See the README file for instructions on compiling Fotoxx from source.
In addition to the programs listed above, the following are also needed:
   g++ GNU C++ compiler and C libraries
   libgtk3.0-dev  Gnome GTK3/GDK3/Pixbuf/etc. function libraries
   libtiff4-dev tiff library development files
   libpng12-dev png library development files
   liblcms2-dev Little CMS development files
Note: package naming contents are decisions made by each Linux distro (the usual chaos). The above names are valid for Debian-based distros (including Ubuntu). For other distros you may have to dig to find the right packages to install.
 
zappcrash - backtrace dumps
If Fotoxx has a fatal error (e.g. segment fault - invalid memory reference), it attempts to intercept the error and produce a backtrace dump which appears in a popup window and/or in the log file:
    /run/shm/fotoxx  (or)  /tmp/fotoxx
Please send this information to me so I can hopefully fix the error (contact). A description of what you did immediately before the crash would also be helpful.
 
Command Line Options
  -v output release version and exit
  /.../imagefile.jpg initial image directory or image file to open
  -recent  (or -r) show a gallery of recent files, most recent at the top
  -new    (or -n) show a gallery of recently added new files (from Index Image Files)
  -prev  (or -p) show the last file viewed in the previous session
  -blank (or -b) show a blank window
  -lang lc_RC language code (+ opt. region code) to use for GUI (de, de_AT, fr ...)
  -menu "menu name" startup menu function - Fotoxx will start with this menu active.

Status Bar Information
CPU 123%  PF 0  1234x987x8  0.45MB  56%  edits: 3  menu locked  area active  dialog open
   CPU 123% current Fotoxx CPU load for all threads and processor cores
   PF 0
hard page fault rate for Fotoxx process - indicates memory shortage
   1234x987x8  image width x height x depth (bits per color)
   0.45MB image file size (updated when a modified image is saved)
   56% zoom status, image % size
   edits: 3 3 edits have been made and can be reversed with the [undo] button
   area active   a select area is present and enabled - edits are confined within the area
   dialog open a dialog for user input is open and waiting

Ubuntu Unity Launcher
The following launcher will have a right-click dropdown menu with three different startup options: blank window, last image viewed, and a gallery of up to 100 recent images that can be selected. Save the following text as a file named fotoxx.desktop, make it executable, and drag the file to the Unity left side launcher list.
  [Desktop Entry]  

  Name=fotoxx
  GenericName=Photo Editor
  Comment=Edit photos and manage collections
  Categories=Photography;
  Type=Application
  Terminal=false
  MimeType=image/bmp;image/gif;image/tiff;image/jpeg;image/png;
  Exec=/usr/bin/fotoxx
  Icon=/usr/share/fotoxx/icons/fotoxx.png
  X-Ayatana-Desktop-Shortcuts=blank window;last image;recent images
 
  [blank window Shortcut Group]
  Name=blank window
  Exec=fotoxx -blank
  TargetEnvironment=Unity
 
  [last image Shortcut Group]
  Name=last image
  Exec=fotoxx -prev
  TargetEnvironment=Unity
 
  [recent images Shortcut Group]
  Name=recent images
  Exec=fotoxx -recent
  TargetEnvironment=Unity

File Types Supported
Fotoxx uses libraries to support reading and writing of image files: the GDK pixbuf library, libpng and libtiff. The file types that can be read and written include JPG/JPEG, PNG, TIF/TIFF and BMP. Three RGB colors with 8 bits per color are supported for all types, and PNG and TIFF also support 16 bits per color. Fewer than 8 bits per color and grayscale images are partly supported, and are converted to RGB internally.

Make Fotoxx the default application for .jpg .png and .tif files
The kind folks from Gnome have decided that this is too complex for mere humans to control. If you use the standard "open with" dialog, or "properties / open with", you can only choose from an official and immutable list of applications. The following works (at least for recent Ubuntu releases):
Create the file mimeapps.list in
  /home/<user>/.local/share/applications/  

with the following text (or add this text at the beginning of an existing file): 
  [Default Applications] 

  image/jpeg=fotoxx.desktop
  image/tiff=fotoxx.desktop
  image/png=fotoxx.desktop
  application/octet-stream=fotoxx.desktop

Image Index Files
These can be found in the directory  /home/<user>/.fotoxx/image_index
The files named "index_001", "index_002", etc. contain the image file pathnames and those metadata items that are indexed for fast searching (dates, ratings, tags, caption, comments, geotags). The file "top_directories" contains a list of the top image directories. These are searched for new image files whenever Fotoxx starts up. The last entry is the thumbnails directory.
 
Color Depth
8-bit color (256 brightness levels), as supported by JPEG files, is the norm for image files and is usually adequate. The effective brightness range for photo paper is less than 8 bits. One brightness step (averaging 1/256 or 0.4% of the entire range) is very hard to see. 16-bit color can be useful if a narrow brightness range within an image has been greatly expanded using retouch functions. This expansion can lead to visible "banding" or "posterization". If the RAW image is edited instead of the JPEG version, this problem can be reduced, even if the image is converted back to JPEG for final storage. See the web page deep color for a more complete explanation with example images.

The JPEG range of 256 brightness steps from black to white has been reduced here to 40 steps, and the image is magnified 2x. Can you see the steps? This illustrates why 256 steps are adequate for most purposes.

Alignment Algorithm
(HDR, HDF, Stack, Panorama) Relatively few high-contrast or "edge" pixels are selected to control alignment in HDR, HDF, Stack and Panorama. The actual pixels used are shown in red during the alignment process, which is also more entertaining. Each image in succession is systematically warped various small amounts and the fit with other images is tested. This is done because two photos made with slightly different horizons or rotations will not fit perfectly with simple translation and rotation. Also the cylindrical image projection used for panoramas is only an approximation of what the camera lens actually does.

Tone Mapping Algorithm
The method used by Fotoxx is home-made, but inspired by Fattal and other gradient-based methods. It is not as effective as Fattal in some cases, but close. On the other hand, it is both fast and simple.

Alpha Channels
Images having alpha channels (transparency information) can be edited, but the alpha channel is lost when the edited image file is saved.

Image Deterioration From Repeated Editing
If you save an edited image file and then use this file later to perform additional edits, pixel resolution may be lost. It is better if you do all edits when the image files are first processed, to minimize image deterioration (or go back to the originals if you still have them). Any function that changes image size or shape will reduce resolution about 1/2 pixel. These are the resize, rotate, bend/warp, and all the composite functions. Rotating 90 degrees does not affect resolution. When downsizing an image, using the ratios 1/2, 1/3, 1/4 will give the least loss of resolution. Functions that change brightness, color or contrast do not affect resolution.
 
JPEG Compression
If a JPEG file from a digital camera is saved with Fotoxx, you will likely notice a large reduction in file size, even if a high JPEG quality level is used. This is because Fotoxx can afford to invest more processing power in the compression. A camera CPU is not very fast and must save the photos quickly to be ready for the next photo, so the processing time needed for high compression is not available.  The CPU of a PC is typically much faster and has more time, so the compression level is higher. The smaller file size does not mean that the quality is less.

Image Deterioration From Repeated Saving of JPEG files
Reading a compressed JPEG image and saving it again can lead to loss of detail and increased image artifacts. The effect seems to be negligible if JPEG "quality" is set to a high value when the image is saved. The image below was saved 10 times using quality=90 (Fotoxx default), each time opening and saving the previous image. Differences can be found if you look hard enough. The images are 2x size and the insets are 5x.

EXIF Errors
Cameras (esp. older ones) do not always produce structurally correct EXIF data, and the program exiftool (used by Fotoxx to manipulate EXIF data) may produce error messages. I have been able to fix these cases by saving the image file on top of itself, which will replace the EXIF data with whatever exiftool was able to read correctly. If desired data gets lost, you can restore using the "Edit Any Metadata" function.

Newline characters in user Comments and Captions
When editing metadata Comments or Captions, if you need to align text in columns, you can use the [enter] key to force new lines. These are converted into the string "\n" before being stored in image EXIF/IPTC data, since newline characters are not allowed (exiftool converts them into periods). If the text is viewed or edited again, the "\n" strings are converted back to new lines, so that the original text alignments are restored. This is not standard, so don't expect the text to remain aligned if viewed in Photoshop, etc. If this is a requirement, then do not use the enter key to make new lines when entering long text - just let the text overflow to the next line by itself. Column alignment is not possible.

Installed Files
The following files are installed with Fotoxx (distro package or "make install" from source package).
/usr is the normal location for installed packages, but this could also be /home/<user>/ or /opt.
  /usr/bin/fotoxx the executable program file
  /usr/share/fotoxx/data user guides and other help files in multiple languages
  /usr/share/fotoxx/locales translation.po files in multiple languages
  /usr/share/fotoxx/icons icons used in menus and toolbars
  /usr/share/doc/fotoxx change log, man page, README and other doc files in multiple languages

Local Files
The following files reside in /home/<user>/.fotoxx/
   /write_text/ image text overlays saved from Image > Add Text
   /collections/ image collections from Tools > Manage Collections
   /favorites saved data for user-configuration of favorites menu
   /locales saved translation (.po) files, possibly user-modified
   /mashup
saved mashup project files
   /saved_areas/ "cutout" files saved from the Select > Save dialog
   /saved_curves curve data saved from Retouch curve edit dialogs
   /geotags downloaded geotag locations and world map image file
   /image_index text files containing searchable data for all image files
   /thumbnails thumbnail files (default location, user can change this)
   bookmarks bookmark names and image file locations
   logfile Fotoxx outputs that may be relevant for diagnosing problems
   parameters setup parameters that are saved across Fotoxx sessions
   KB-shortcuts user-defined or modified keyboard shortcuts
   latest_release
contains the current or latest Fotoxx release version
   pagesetup
saves page setup data for print function
   printsettings
saves print settings data for print function
   printfile.png the last file printed with Fotoxx
   newest files
a list of the 200 most recently added image files
   recent_files a list of the last 100 files opened by Fotoxx, saved when Fotoxx exits
   plugins
saves the plugins menu contents
   search_results a list of the last image files found with Metadata > Search Images
   slideshow-prefs
user slideshow preferences
   slideshow-tone.oga
slideshow pause tone (user replaceable)
   tags_defined a list of all categories and tags currently used in all images
   zdialog_inputs saved dialog data for dialogs that recall prior inputs
   zdialog_positions saved dialog window positions (relative to main window)

Preview Mode
Some edit functions use a reduced image size for a faster interactive response time. This reduced size is shown on the status bar as "reduced". When [done] is pressed, the full-size image is then processed. This is why [done] sometimes takes noticeable time. A monitor-size image (2 megapixels) is 7 times faster to process than a 14 megapixel image (typical digital camera). This method is used whenever the preview edits can be applied to the full-size image without visible impact (Trim/Rotate, Bend menu, brightness and color related functions). It cannot be used for things like sharpen and tone mapping because the results for a small image cannot be converted for a larger image.

File Size in Status Bar
The file size shown on the status bar while an image is being edited is the original (unedited) file size. The file size for an edited image is not known until the image is compressed and saved on disk. In memory the size is length x width x 3 colors x 4 bytes. A 10 megapixel image uses 120 megabytes in memory and typically < 2 megabytes on disk (JPEG). When the edited image is saved, the correct file size is updated on the status bar.

Metadata used by Fotoxx
The following metadata items (stored inside the image files) are used by Fotoxx. These items and any other metadata can be viewed or edited using Fotoxx or other programs such as Photoshop. Images can be searched using these items or any other metadata as selection criteria. Those marked "index" can be searched very fast, others more slowly. Items not listed here are searchable but not indexed.
 
 Metadata section and name  Usage  Index
  IPTC:Keywords  tags entered by user   yes
  IPTC:Rating  "star" rating entered by user   yes
  EXIF:ImageSize  pixel width and height, 1234x2345
  yes
  EXIF:DateTimeOriginal  date/time photo was made, or entered by user   yes
  EXIF:ImageHistory  history of image edits (used by Fotoxx and others)   no
  EXIF:UserComment  comment text entered by user   yes
  IPTC:Caption-Abstract  caption or abstract text entered by user   yes
  EXIF:FocalLengthIn35mmFormat  camera focal length used for photo, in 35mm equivalent   no
  EXIF:City, Country  city and country from camera GPS, or entered by user   yes
  EXIF:GPSLatitude, GPSLongitude  earth coordinates from camera GPS, or entered by user   yes

Dialog Window Positioning
For commonly used dialogs, Fotoxx saves the dialog window position (relative to the main window) and tries to restore the same position the next time the dialog is started. This works, mostly. Sometimes the window manager ignores this request and places the dialog somewhere else.

Benchmarks
Conditions: Fotoxx 14.03, Intel Core i5 3 GHz, 5400 rpm disk (slow), EXT4 file system.
The first benchmark is for a new install of Fotoxx with 87425 image files to be indexed
(constructed by duplicating my own collection of 6725 image files 13 times).
The next two are for subsequent Fotoxx startups with 0 and 120 new image files.
The Search benchmarks show the fast search speed when all search criteria are indexed.
 
  Benchmark Description
 Disk
 Image Files
 Time
  First initialization, find and index all image files
 5400 rpm
 87425
 54 min.
  Subsequent startup with no new image files
 5400 rpm  0 new, 87425 old
 2.2 sec.
  Subsequent startup, 120 new files to index
 5400 rpm  120 new, 87305 old
 4.5 sec.
  Find all images with tag "joe"
 5400 rpm  429
 < 1 sec.
  Find all images with "lake" in file name
 5400 rpm  364
 < 1 sec.
  Find all images dated Jan 1 - Feb 28, 2013
 5400 rpm  299
 < 1 sec.
  Same time period, with city = "Freising"
 5400 rpm  104
 < 1 sec.
  Same time period, with make = "panasonic"
 5400 rpm  104
 7 sec. (1)
  Click on world map, France / Esterel
 5400 rpm  65
 < 1 sec.
  List all locations having images
 5400 rpm  368 locations
 1.6 sec.
  Click on location Germany / Augsburg
 5400 rpm  143
 < 1 sec.
  First Fotoxx startup after a system reboot
 7200 rpm
 99671
 8.4 sec. (2)
  Next startup after the preceding test
 7200 rpm
 99671
 2.2 sec. (2)
 
(1) This report shows the slower speed to find non-indexed metadata: 299 images were found quickly by time, then searched for non-indexed data. This report also used the expanded report format with thumbnails and metadata list.
(2) There were no new files to index and 99671 old files. The Fotoxx startup time after a reboot is longer because the directories are not yet cached in memory. The next startup was much faster.

Source Code
The C++ source code is heavily commented in the hope that others can understand and use the code for their own projects. If you have a technical question about how something works, or a better idea to pass along, you may contact me.

Questions, Problems, Bugs
If you have a question or run into a problem, you may contact me. If you send me any images that work poorly, I can use these to try to improve Fotoxx. If there is a traceback dump (zappcrash) on the screen, or error messages in the log file (/home/<user>/.fotoxx/fotoxx.log), please send these also. Please explain exactly how to produce the error, and what version of Fotoxx and what Linux flavor you are using.

Technical Reference Book
I used the book "Introduction to Image Processing and Analysis" by Russ and Russ, CRC Press. It is clear and concise. The following algorithms were adapted from this book: flatten brightness distribution, noise reduction (median smoothing, top hat), sharpen (unsharp mask, kuwahara), embossing. The affine transform method for image warping and rotation was found via Google (many sources).

Acknowledgements
The programs  libtiff, libpng, liblcms, dcraw, ufraw, exiftool  have helped Fotoxx evolve much faster than otherwise possible. Of course this also applies to GTK, GDK, the pixbuf library, the GNU tools and libraries, and the entire GNU/Linux ecosystem. Thanks to those who have donated their work for translations and those who have donated their ideas for development and their time for testing. Special thanks to the following: Dick, Jill, Jamps, Andre, Doriano, Curley, Jan, Rosi.