Provided by: fotoxx-common_24.70-1_all bug

NAME

       Fotocx - photo/image editor and collection manager

DESCRIPTION

       Organize  and  manage a large image collection. Edit and optimize photos and other images,
       add special effects, edit metadata, search images, create a  photomontage,  perform  batch
       operations.  Fotocx  is  a  GTK GUI application.  The included user manual explains Fotocx
       operation in great detail.

LONG DESCRIPTION

       Fotocx is a free Linux program for editing photos or other images  and  managing  a  large
       collection.  Fotocx  has  powerful editing tools to correct and enhance photos. Fotocx can
       instantly find desired images within a huge collection,  based  on  file/folder  names  or
       embedded  metadata  such  as date, tags/keywords, title, description, rating, location ...
       any metadata.
       Image folders can be viewed as a scrolling gallery of  thumbnail  images.   Navigation  of
       folders and subfolders is simple and fast. Click a thumbnail for a full window view of the
       image. The image can be zoomed, panned and scrolled using the  mouse.  Gallery  thumbnails
       can vary from small to huge.  Popup windows can be used to view or compare multiple images
       at any scale.  Thumbnail galleries are also used for  image  search  results  and  albums.
       Albums are selected images arranged in a desired order. Fotocx has many editing tools that
       go beyond the basics. Images with severe problems (underexposed,  false  colors,  blurred,
       uneven  lighting,  fog/haze)  can be brought back to life. Details lost in shadows or haze
       can be brought out.  Images with distorted perspective  (esp.  wide-angle  views)  can  be
       corrected.
       Fotocx  is standards compliant. Nothing done by Fotocx makes images less usable with other
       applications. Fotocx uses your image files wherever  they  are:  they  are  not  moved  or
       duplicated. Fotocx does create an index for fast image searching, and thumbnail images for
       fast gallery displays. These add typically 2% to overall storage requirements. There is no
       database to manage - the index manages itself.
       Fotocx  can  import RAW images and perform all processing in deep color (24 bits per color
       used internally). Edited images can be saved as JPEG, TIFF (8/16 bits/color), or PNG (8/16
       bits). Convert single RAW files or selected batches (click thumbnails from gallery pages).
       Image edit functions are interactive with rapid visual feedback, using the full image or a
       chosen zoom-in area. Undo and Redo can be applied serially to all the edits of  an  image.
       Intermediate  and  final  results  can  be  saved  as  new  files or as new versions (e.g.
       filename.v02.jpg).
       Areas within an image can be selected and edited separately from the background. Areas can
       be selected using several methods: drag the mouse to select and flood into matching tones,
       follow feature edges, or outline an area freehand. Complex feature edges, such as hair  or
       foliage, can be accurately selected. Selected areas can be copied and pasted into the same
       or other images, resized, rotated, brightened, etc.
       Layers are not used. Each edit step can be saved separately as a file
       An image can be "mouse painted" onto another image.  Paint  from  a  chosen  source  image
       location to a chosen destination, with optional rescale.
       Batch  functions  are  available  to  copy, move, rename, resize, upright, convert format,
       convert RAW files, and add or revise metadata.
       Several tools are  available  to  change  size  and  shape:  crop,  rescale,  rotate,  fix
       perspective,  curve/warp  the  whole  image or selected areas within the image. There is a
       special tool to 'flatten' photos of curved surfaces, e.g. a page from a thick  book  or  a
       poster on a round column.
       Text  can  be  added to an image. Any font and size can be used, any color, any angle. The
       text can have variable transparency, an outline, a shadow, or an embossed  effect  -  good
       for  a  signature  or  copyright.  Other  basic markups are available: lines, arrows, box,
       oval/circle.
       Advanced edit functions: Dust spots from old slides or photos  can  be  removed,  roadside
       trash  or  power  lines  can be erased. Panoramas can be made by stitching photos together
       seamlessly, automatically matching brightness and color. Photos with a range  of  exposure
       values  can  be  combined  into  an  HDR  image with adjustable contributions. Photos with
       varying focus depths can be combined into an image that is sharp over the combined  range.
       Photos  of one scene taken at different moments can be combined to remove passing autos or
       tourists. Multiple photos made under low light conditions can be combined to reduce noise.
       Images  and  text can be combined into a mashup (montage), using the mouse to position and
       resize the components and adjust overlaps and transparencies.
       Fotocx has a batch scripting tool to speed the processing of multiple images requiring the
       same edits: record the edits made to a base image and then apply these edits automatically
       to any number of selected images.
       Many special effects ('filters') are available to convert a photo  into  a  line  drawing,
       sketch,  painting,  embossing,  cartoon,  dithered  image,  mosaic,  or abstract patterns.
       Background patterns and textures can be added.
       Images can be rapidly searched using file  and  folder  names  or  partial  names,  dates,
       assigned  tags,  ratings, locations, and any other metadata stored in the image. Some data
       is automatic from the camera (date, location,  exposure  data),  and  other  data  can  be
       manually  entered  (tags, captions ...).  Search criteria can be used in combination; e.g.
       find Chicago photos for years 2008-2020 containing tags 'Barbara' or 'Barbie'.
       Locations (from a camera GPS sensor or entered manually) can also  be  searched.  You  can
       view a map of any region in the world, at any scale, using an internet map service. Images
       having location data show as markers on these maps. Click a marker to get a gallery of the
       corresponding  images.   You  can  jump from a given photo to its location on a world map,
       where you can find other photos from the same or nearby locations.
       Albums can be made  using  selected  images  from  your  collection.  The  files  are  not
       duplicated. Select images by clicking gallery thumbnails. Arrange the images with drag and
       drop. Albums can be made into slide shows. Choose animated transitions between images, pan
       and zoom effects, and places to auto-pause for narration.
       Fotocx  includes  a  comprehensive  user  manual, also used for interactive help: press F1
       while using any function in Fotocx to see the corresponding topic.  You  should  take  the
       time to read the overview pages. The function details can be viewed as needed using F1.

CAPABILITIES LIST

       • Organize and manage a very large photo/image collection.
       • Comprehensive user guide and popup context help via F1 key.
       • Thumbnail browser/navigator with variable thumb size and metadata view.
       • Click thumbnail for full-size view, image zoom in/out and pan/scroll.
       • RAW file conversion, single or batch, output with 8 or 16 bits per color.
       • Large set of functions to edit, repair, refine, and transform images.
       • Internal processing in 24 bits per color (float), output in 8 or 16 bits.
       • Edited files have a version number, originals are retained by default.
       • Fast edit visual feedback using the full image or selected zoom-in area.
       • Undo/Redo button - compare original/edited versions (instant replace).
       • Conventional edit functions: rotate, upright, crop, rescale, add margins,
         retouch: brightness/color/contrast/saturation/temperature/white balance,
         markup: text (decorative features)/lines/arrows/boxes/circles/ellipses,
         edit colors using RGB or HSL, convert B&W/color/negative/positive/sepia.
       • Repair functions: sharpen, blur selected areas, denoise, defog, red eyes,
         smart erase (remove spoilers), remove halos, suppress JPEG artifacts,
         anti-alias (suppress jaggies), remove dust spots, fix color fringes.
       • Refine functions: edit or flatten brightness histogram (enhance detail),
         increase local contrast (enhance detail), match colors to master image,
         add soft focus, amplify existing contrast, global and local retinex,
         add brightness ramp in any direction, add/remove vignette (via curve edit).
       • Special effect conversions: sketch, outlines, cartoon, emboss, painting,
         tiles, texture, pattern, dither (5 modes), engrave, mosaic, shift colors,
         add noise (hide color bands), set no. of colors (per RGB), alien colors.
       • Warp image: unbend (wide-angle photos, panoramas), warp selected area,
         fix perspective (photo from an angle), warp image (linear/curved/affine),
         unwarp closeup (fix balloon face), add waves, twist image, make sphere,
         turn inside-out, tiny planet, escher spiral, flatten curved horizon,
         flatten photo of curved surface (thick book page, poster on a column).
       • Edit functions can be 'painted' locally and gradually, using the mouse.
       • Copy areas within and across images by mouse painting and blending.
       • Create or maintain transparent image areas while editing.
       • Combine images: HDR (combine bright/dark images, adjust contributions),
         HDF (combine different focus depths), stack/layer combinations by area,
         panorama (2-6 images), make an array or matrix of many images.
       • Mashup: arrange images and text in an arbitrary layout using the mouse.
         (objects can be resized, rotated, overlapped with transparent areas ...)
       • Custom user menu: collect frequently used functions into one menu.
       • Plugins: use Gimp, Imagemagic ... as embedded Fotocx edit functions.
       • Scripts: record image edits, package as an edit function to re-use.
       • Select image objects or areas to edit separately from the background:
         outline by hand, follow feature edges, 'flood' into matching colors ...
       • Complex feature edges can be accurately selected (e.g. hair, foliage).
       • Batch tools: rename, resize, convert, export, add/revise/report metadata,
         convert RAW files, add overlay text, apply custom edit script.
       • Metadata edit and report (tags, dates, titles, geotags ... any metadata).
       • Search images using any metadata and folder/file names or partial names:
         dates, tags, locations, ratings, titles, descriptions, exposure data ...
       • Show a list of images by location and date range, click for image gallery.
       • Show an image calendar, click on year or month for a gallery of images.
       • Scalable internet map, click on marker for gallery of images at location.
       • Add location names and geocoordinates to an image by clicking on the map.
       • View 360 degree panorama image (Google Street View format).
       • Show video files as thumbnails (using any video frame), play video.
       • Show animated GIF files as thumbnails (first frame), play animation.
       • Bookmarks: assign names to folder/file locations, go to name (gallery).
       • Create albums with chosen images arranged by drag & drop. No duplication.
       • Slide show: show album images with animated transitions and pan/zoom.
       • Print an image at any scale. Printer color calibration tool is available.
       • Custom keyboard shortcuts can be assigned to chosen functions.
       • Cycle wallpaper images from a Fotocx album or any folder of image files.

SEE ALSO

       The User Guide is available from the menu Help > User Guide The home page for Fotocx is at
       https://kornelix.net

AUTHORS

       Written by Mike Cornelison <mkornelix@gmail.com>