Showing 3 open source projects for "image processing toolbox for..."

View related business solutions
  • Go from Code to Production URL in Seconds Icon
    Go from Code to Production URL in Seconds

    Cloud Run deploys apps in any language instantly. Scales to zero. Pay only when code runs.

    Skip the Kubernetes configs. Cloud Run handles HTTPS, scaling, and infrastructure automatically. Two million requests free per month.
    Try it free
  • $300 in Free Credit Towards Top Cloud Services Icon
    $300 in Free Credit Towards Top Cloud Services

    Build VMs, containers, AI, databases, storage—all in one place.

    Start your project in minutes. After credits run out, 20+ products include free monthly usage. Only pay when you're ready to scale.
    Get Started
  • 1
    Jimp

    Jimp

    An image processing library written entirely in JavaScript for Node

    An image processing library for Node written entirely in JavaScript, with zero native dependencies. If you're using this library with TypeScript the method of importing slightly differs from JavaScript. Instead of using require, you must import it with ES6 default import scheme. If you're using a web bundles (webpack, rollup, parcel) you can benefit from using the module build of jimp.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    smartcrop.js

    smartcrop.js

    Content aware image cropping

    Image cropping is a common task in many web applications. Usually just cutting out the center of the image works out ok. It's often a compromise and sometimes it fails miserably. Smartcrop.js is the result of my experiments with content aware image cropping. It uses fairly simple image processing and a few rules to attempt to create better crops of images.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    CSSgram

    CSSgram

    CSS library for Instagram filters

    ...What we're doing is adding filters to the images, as well as applying color and/or gradient overlays via various blending techniques to mimic filter effects. This means less manual image processing and more fun filter effects on the web! We are using pseudo-elements (i.e. :before and :after) to create the filter effects, so you must apply these filters on a containing element (i.e. not a content-block like <img>. The recommendation is to wrap your images in a <figure> tag. If you use custom naming in your CSS architecture, you can add the .scss files for the provided styles within your project and then @extend the filter effects within your style definitions. ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next
MongoDB Logo MongoDB