Display image as grayscale using matplotlib

旧街凉风 提交于 2019-11-25 20:47:16

The following code will load an image from a file image.png and will display it as grayscale.

import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from PIL import Image

fname = 'image.png'
image = Image.open(fname).convert("L")
arr = np.asarray(image)
plt.imshow(arr, cmap='gray', vmin=0, vmax=255)
plt.show()

If you want to display the inverse grayscale, switch the cmap to cmap='gray_r'.

Try to use a grayscale colormap?

E.g. something like

imshow(..., cmap=pyplot.cm.binary)

For a list of colormaps, see http://scipy-cookbook.readthedocs.org/items/Matplotlib_Show_colormaps.html

Eliel Van Hojman

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

You can also run once in your code

plt.gray()

This will show the images in grayscale as default

im = array(Image.open('I_am_batman.jpg').convert('L'))
plt.imshow(im)
plt.show()

I would use the get_cmap method. Ex.:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

plt.imshow(matrix, cmap=plt.get_cmap('gray'))

try this:

import pylab
from scipy import misc

pylab.imshow(misc.lena(),cmap=pylab.gray())
pylab.show()

@unutbu's answer is quite close to the right answer.

By default, plt.imshow() will try to scale your (MxN) array data to 0.0~1.0. And then map to 0~255. For most natural taken images, this is fine, you won't see a different. But if you have narrow range of pixel value image, say the min pixel is 156 and the max pixel is 234. The gray image will looks totally wrong. The right way to show an image in gray is

from matplotlib.colors import NoNorm
...
plt.imshow(img,cmap='gray',norm=NoNorm())
...

Let's see an example:

this is the origianl image: original

this is using defaul norm setting,which is None: wrong pic

this is using NoNorm setting,which is NoNorm(): right pic

user3452134

Use no interpolation and set to gray.

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
plt.imshow(img[:,:,1], cmap='gray',interpolation='none')
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