Image averaging

kevinthenerd

Platinum Member
Jun 27, 2002
2,908
0
76
If I have a bunch of images (BMP, JPEG, GIF... name your raster format), is there a way to average the pixels in each image to come up with a blended composite?

Example:

Image 1:
123

Image 2:
321

Image 3:
024

Image 4:
420

Blended Composite (average of each pixel):
222
 

LS20

Banned
Jan 22, 2002
5,858
0
0
why dont you just overlay all pics in photoshop and set opacity to (100/#pix)%
 

AgaBoogaBoo

Lifer
Feb 16, 2003
26,108
5
81
well, I'm not sure what you want to do, but:

You can use photoshop, create four layers, copy each image into its own layer, then set each layer's opacity to 25%

There will "blend" each of them equally.
 

kevinthenerd

Platinum Member
Jun 27, 2002
2,908
0
76
Originally posted by: AgaBooga
well, I'm not sure what you want to do, but:

You can use photoshop, create four layers, copy each image into its own layer, then set each layer's opacity to 25%

There will "blend" each of them equally.

But the stacking/layering/ordering would mess up the bias, wouldn't it? I'm not sure the numbers would stack quite like that. Wouldn't the top-most image have the most bias?
 

AgaBoogaBoo

Lifer
Feb 16, 2003
26,108
5
81
Originally posted by: kevinthenerd
Originally posted by: AgaBooga
well, I'm not sure what you want to do, but:

You can use photoshop, create four layers, copy each image into its own layer, then set each layer's opacity to 25%

There will "blend" each of them equally.

But the stacking/layering/ordering would mess up the bias, wouldn't it? I'm not sure the numbers would stack quite like that. Wouldn't the top-most image have the most bias?

Nope. They'll all be equal.
 

Eli

Super Moderator | Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
50,419
8
81
Are you going for a multi-exposure film picture look?

If so, you can use photoshop & probably a myriad of others.
 

kevinthenerd

Platinum Member
Jun 27, 2002
2,908
0
76
Originally posted by: Eli
Are you going for a multi-exposure film picture look?

If so, you can use photoshop & probably a myriad of others.

Yes. I found out how to take night pictures with my cheap webcam by taking advantage of the statistical analysis of the so-called "noise."

 

Eli

Super Moderator | Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
50,419
8
81

thomsbrain

Lifer
Dec 4, 2001
18,148
1
0
Originally posted by: kevinthenerd
Originally posted by: AgaBooga
well, I'm not sure what you want to do, but:

You can use photoshop, create four layers, copy each image into its own layer, then set each layer's opacity to 25%

There will "blend" each of them equally.

But the stacking/layering/ordering would mess up the bias, wouldn't it? I'm not sure the numbers would stack quite like that. Wouldn't the top-most image have the most bias?

no.
 

thomsbrain

Lifer
Dec 4, 2001
18,148
1
0
Originally posted by: kevinthenerd
Originally posted by: AgaBooga
Do you have access to photoshop?

How do I do this in GiMP?

first reboot and insert your windows CD. follow the on-screen instructions. when you're done, reboot and insert your photoshop CD. follow the onscreen instructions.



;) j/k, i have no idea.
 

johnjbruin

Diamond Member
Jul 17, 2001
4,401
1
0
Originally posted by: thomsbrain
Originally posted by: kevinthenerd
Originally posted by: AgaBooga
Do you have access to photoshop?

How do I do this in GiMP?

first reboot and insert your windows CD. follow the on-screen instructions. when you're done, reboot and insert your photoshop CD. follow the onscreen instructions.
lol

 

kevinthenerd

Platinum Member
Jun 27, 2002
2,908
0
76
Originally posted by: thomsbrain
Originally posted by: kevinthenerd
Originally posted by: AgaBooga
Do you have access to photoshop?

How do I do this in GiMP?

first reboot and insert your windows CD. follow the on-screen instructions. when you're done, reboot and insert your photoshop CD. follow the onscreen instructions.



;) j/k, i have no idea.

The box said "requires Microsoft Windows 98 or better"

so I installed Linux ;)
 

MattCo

Platinum Member
Jan 29, 2001
2,198
2
81
Post some examples once you get it figured out, sounds pretty cool.

-MC