“Diff” an image using ImageMagick

Justin Noel picture Justin Noel · Feb 27, 2011 · Viewed 81.2k times · Source

How can I get the difference between two images? I have the original image. Someone has written on an exact duplicate of the original image. Now, I need to compare the original to the written on image and extract just the writing in image format.

Example: I have a picture of a house. Someone took a copy and wrote “Hello!” on the copy. I want to somehow compare the two pictures, remove the house, and be left with an image of the words “Hello!”.

Is this possible with ImageMagick? I know there are ways to get the statistical difference between images, but that is not what I am looking for.

Answer

Kurt Pfeifle picture Kurt Pfeifle · Jul 6, 2012

My own favorites are these two:

 compare image1 image2 -compose src diff.png
 compare image1 image2 -compose src diff.pdf

The only difference between the 2 commands above: the first one shows the visual difference between the two images as a PNG file, the second one as a PDF.

The resulting diff file displays all pixels which are different in red color. The ones which are unchanged appear white.

Short and sweet.

Note, your images need not be the same type. You can even mix JPEG, TIFF, PNG -- under one condition: the images should be of the same size (image dimension in pixels). The output format is determined by the output filename's extension.

Should you, for some reason, need a higher resolution than the default one (72 dpi) -- then just add an appropriate -density parameter:

 compare -density 300 image1 image2 -compose src diff.jpeg

Illustrated examples

Here are a few illustrations of results for variations of the above command. Note: the two files compared were even PDF files, so it works with these too (as long as they are 1-pagers)!


Left: Image with text       Center: Original image      Right: Differences (=text) in red pixels. Red difference pixels only; identical pixels are white

compare \
        porsche-with-scratch.pdf  porsche-original.pdf \
       -compose src \
        diff-compose-default.pdf

This is the same command I suggested earlier above.


Left: Image with text      Center: Original image      Right: Differences in 'seagreen' pixels. Seagreen difference pixels only; identical pixels are white

compare \
        porsche-with-scratch.pdf  porsche-original.pdf \
       -compose src \
       -highlight-color seagreen \
        diff-compose-default.pdf

This command adds a parameter to make the difference pixels 'seagreen' instead of the default red.


Left: Image with text       Center: Original image       Right: Blue diffs (but w. some context background) Blue difference pixels only; first of the compared images as a lightened-up backgroundl

compare \
        porsche-with-scratch.pdf  porsche-original.pdf \
       -highlight-color blue \
        diff-compose-default.pdf

This command removes the -compose src part -- the result is the default behavior of compare which keeps as a lightened background the first one of the 2 diffed images. (This time with added parameter to make the diff pixels appear in blue.)