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I would like to tint an image with a color reference. The results should look like the Multiply blending mode in Photoshop, where whites would be replaced with tint:

alt text

I will be changing the color value continuously.

Follow up: I would put the code to do this in my ImageView's drawRect: method, right?

As always, a code snippet would greatly aid in my understanding, as opposed to a link.

Update: Subclassing a UIImageView with the code Ramin suggested.

I put this in viewDidLoad: of my view controller:

[self.lena setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:kImageName]];
[self.lena setOverlayColor:[UIColor blueColor]];
[super viewDidLoad];

I see the image, but it is not being tinted. I also tried loading other images, setting the image in IB, and calling setNeedsDisplay: in my view controller.

Update: drawRect: is not being called.

Final update: I found an old project that had an imageView set up properly so I could test Ramin's code and it works like a charm!

Final, final update:

For those of you just learning about Core Graphics, here is the simplest thing that could possibly work.

In your subclassed UIView:

- (void)drawRect:(CGRect)rect {

    CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();

    CGContextSetFillColor(context, CGColorGetComponents([UIColor colorWithRed:0.5 green:0.5 blue:0 alpha:1].CGColor)); // don't make color too saturated

    CGContextFillRect(context, rect); // draw base

    [[UIImage imageNamed:@"someImage.png"] drawInRect: rect blendMode:kCGBlendModeOverlay alpha:1.0]; // draw image
}
flag

I added the snippet before posting to some old drawRect code I had sitting around and it worked fine. May want to try it without the [super viewDidLoad] call (or move it above). Also double-check to make sure whoever is allocating this object is allocating the derived version not vanilla UIImageView (i.e if it's load in a nib, the allocator, etc). – Ramin Jul 13 at 14:55
Another suggestion if the above doesn't work: instead of subclassing UIImageView subclass a plain UIView and add both overlayColor and a UIImage property called 'image' that you can set. Then put the drawRect in there. The drawRect code doesn't care whether the 'image' value comes from UIImageView or from a property you've defined. – Ramin Jul 13 at 14:59

4 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check

First you'll want to subclass UIImageView and override the drawRect method. Your class needs a UIColor property (let's call it overlayColor) to hold the blend color and a custom setter that forces a redraw when the color changes. Something like this:

- (void) setOverlayColor:(UIColor *)newColor {
   if (overlayColor)
     [overlayColor release];

   overlayColor = [newColor retain];
   [self setNeedsDisplay]; // fires off drawRect each time color changes
}

In the drawRect method you'll want to draw the image first then overlay it with a rectangle filled with the color you want along with the proper blending mode, something like this:

- (void) drawRect:(CGRect)area
{
  CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();
  CGContextSaveGState(context);

  // Draw picture first
  //
  CGContextDrawImage(context, self.frame, self.image.CGImage);

  // Blend mode could be any of CGBlendMode values. Now draw filled rectangle
  // over top of image.
  //
  CGContextSetBlendMode (context, kCGBlendModeMultiply);
  CGContextSetFillColor(context, CGColorGetComponents(self.overlayColor.CGColor));  	
  CGContextFillRect (context, self.bounds);
  CGContextRestoreGState(context);
}

Ordinarily to optimize the drawing you would restrict the actual drawing to only the area passed in to drawRect, but since the background image has to be redrawn each time the color changes it's likely the whole thing will need refreshing.

To use it create an instance of the object then set the image property (inherited from UIImageView) to the picture and overlayColor to a UIColor value (the blend levels can be adjusted by changing the alpha value of the color you pass down).

link|flag
tried your code, results above. – willc2 Jul 13 at 9:01
Follow-up suggestions attached to original request (above). – Ramin Jul 13 at 17:45
should add CGContextSaveGState(context); before changing the blend mode or you get a gstack underflow. – willc2 Jul 17 at 6:19
D'oh, thanks. Copy/paste error. I've fixed it in the code snippet. – Ramin Jul 17 at 16:49
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The only thing I can think of would be to create a rectangular mostly transparent view with the desired color and lay it over your image view by adding it as a subview. I'm not sure if this will really tint the image in the way you imagine though, I'm not sure how you would hack into an image and selectively replace certain colors with others... sounds pretty ambitious to me.

For example:

UIImageView *yourPicture = (however you grab the image);
UIView *colorBlock = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:yourPicture.frame];
//Replace R G B and A with values from 0 - 1 based on your color and transparency
colorBlock.backgroundColor = [UIColor colorWithRed:R green:G blue:B alpha:A];
[yourPicture addSubView:colorBlock];

Documentation for UIColor:

colorWithRed:green:blue:alpha:

Creates and returns a color object using the specified opacity and RGB component values.

+ (UIColor *)colorWithRed:(CGFloat)red green:(CGFloat)green blue:(CGFloat)blue alpha:(CGFloat)alpha

Parameters

red    - The red component of the color object, specified as a value from 0.0 to 1.0.

green  - The green component of the color object, specified as a value from 0.0 to 1.0.

blue   - The blue component of the color object, specified as a value from 0.0 to 1.0.



alpha  - The opacity value of the color object, specified as a value from 0.0 to 1.0.

Return Value

The color object. The color information represented by this object is in the device RGB colorspace.
link|flag
Core Graphics seems to be able to apply bending modes. How, is the question. – willc2 Jul 13 at 3:37
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Also you might want to consider caching the composited image for performance and just rendering it in drawRect:, then updated it if a dirty flag is indeed dirty. While you might be changing it often, there may be cases where draws are coming in and you're not dirty, so you can simply refresh from the cache. If memory is more of an issue than performance, you can ignore this :)

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

This could be very useful: PhotoshopFramework is one powerful library to manipulate images on Objective-C. This was developed to bring the same functionalities that Adobe Photoshop users are familiar. Examples: Set colors using RGB 0-255, apply blend filers, transformations...

Is open source, here is the project link: https://sourceforge.net/projects/photoshopframew/

link|flag
Looks interesting, but what are you going to change the name to when Adobe's lawyers find out about it? – Kristopher Johnson Oct 22 at 20:47
We'll figure out later. Is not a commercial product anyway, is some kind of "codename". Also is an internal library. – SEQOY Development Team Oct 22 at 23:01

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