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It looks like ImageMagick does not always convert a single favicon.ico file to a predictable single png file - for some favicon's, it generates a bunch of other favicon-01.png, favicon-02.png, etc... Is there a way to figure out which one's the actual converted favicon you want - or figure out how many got generated, to delete the unwanted ones?

3 Answers 3

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I came across with the same problem while I was trying to convert blogger's favicon and I solved it by using -flatten parameter of Imagemagick like this:

convert "favicon.ico" -thumbnail 16x16 -alpha on -background none -flatten "favicon.png"

alt text

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  • 1
    Flawless, and it retains the transparent background too. Thanks! Dec 26, 2013 at 14:49
  • Also, you can check my web service geticon.org and it's source: github.com/gokercebeci/geticon
    – goker
    Feb 10, 2014 at 8:06
  • Again, the Swiss Army knife in the world of image processing saved me from massive head-ache.
    – Andreas
    Oct 20, 2020 at 9:18
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This likely happens because there are multiple images in the icon file - this is to provide differet resolutions for different contexts. Presumably you'd want to run a search in the target directory for favicon*.png, then check the dimensions of each one to find the one you wanted (deleting the others as you go).

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I guess some of these are animated gifs. You can take the first one as described here:

i.e.:

$magick> convert 'images.gif[0]' image.png

I don't have ImageMagic installed, but you might try the above for all favicon.ico, it might work fine.

Otherwise, you would probably need to write a script to check for favicon-01.png and, if it exists, rename it to favicon.png and delete favicon-*.png (provided you don't have anything else named like that in the working folder).

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