RGB to LAB converting to a weird colour
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I have an issue convering my RGB image to Lab: The following is my output of the ImgtoLab
Code
c= makecform("srgb2lab")
ImgtoLab = applycform(dilatedimg,c)
1 Comment
Jan
on 15 Mar 2022
Please post the input data and a minimal working code to reproduce the problem. Of course a Lab color image looks different, if you display it on an RGB device.
Accepted Answer
DGM
on 16 Mar 2022
Edited: DGM
on 16 Mar 2022
Image viewing/reading/writing tools are generally only capable of handling either single-channel grayscale images, single-channel indexed color images, or RGB images. For grayscale and RGB images, the tools expect data to be scaled according to their class. For floating-point data, that means that all image data is within [0 1].
You have a floating-point LAB image. This will be outside the expected data range for what imshow() expects, and so everything will be clipped severely. The image will be blindly rendered as if it were RGB, since there is no metadata that tells imshow() what colorspace is in use, and imshow() doesn't have the functionality to do anything about it even if it knew what it was. The only thing it knows is that it has a MxNx3 floating point array.
A = imread('patchchart2.png');
A = im2double(A);
dilatedimg = imdilate(A,ones(4));
c= makecform("srgb2lab");
ImgtoLab = applycform(dilatedimg,c);
% data range per channel
[min(ImgtoLab(:,:,1),[],'all') max(ImgtoLab(:,:,1),[],'all')]
[min(ImgtoLab(:,:,2),[],'all') max(ImgtoLab(:,:,2),[],'all')]
[min(ImgtoLab(:,:,3),[],'all') max(ImgtoLab(:,:,3),[],'all')]
imshow(ImgtoLab)
Depending on what you're trying to do, a means of visualization like what @yanqi liu shows might be more useful.
For what it's worth, I don't know why you aren't just using rgb2lab() (maybe you want to use a different whitepoint or profile?)
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More Answers (1)
yanqi liu
on 16 Mar 2022
img = imread('football.jpg');
jmg = rgb2lab(img);
figure;
subplot(2, 2, 1); imshow(img, []); title('origin');
subplot(2, 2, 2); imshow(jmg(:,:,1), []); title('L');
subplot(2, 2, 3); imshow(jmg(:,:,2), []); title('A');
subplot(2, 2, 4); imshow(jmg(:,:,3), []); title('B');
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