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I have written a Python code which resizes an image into a max 1200 x 1200 frame, maintaining the aspect ratio. I am coming across this case where the input image(1080 x 1350) is 249.8KB whereas the output image(960 x 1200) is 317.2KB. This is happening in spite of optimize = True and maintaining the quality. My code is as below:

from PIL import Image
from wand.image import Image as Wand

MAX_RES = 1200
photo = Image.open("input.jpg")
breadth,height = photo.size
qual = Wand(filename="input.jpg").compression_quality
if(not((breadth <= MAX_RES) and (height <= MAX_RES))):
    resizeRatio = max (float(breadth)/MAX_RES, float(height)/MAX_RES)
    photo = photo.resize((int(breadth/resizeRatio),int(height/resizeRatio)))
    photo.save("output.jpg",optimization = True,quality=qual) 

Using Image.ANTIALIAS increases the size even more.

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  • Do you know for certain what the original JPEG settings were? (quality etc.) Nov 24, 2015 at 11:37
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    File size of a compressed image is not directly related to image size. A compression method can be less efficient when you modify the image, even a simple resize. Nov 24, 2015 at 11:39
  • @SuperBiasedMan, how does one know that on an Ubuntu machine? I have the file on my hard-disk Nov 24, 2015 at 11:44
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    @SagnikSinha I'm not familiar with PIL but there's an extensive answer on that here Nov 24, 2015 at 11:52
  • @SagnikSinha You can find out image properties using the identify command-line tool. It is possible that your original image had a lower quality than the resized one. Nov 25, 2015 at 11:16

1 Answer 1

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There are a number of factors that affect JPEG compression:

  1. Subsampling of Cb and Cr components.
  2. Quantization tables use (sometimes dumbed down to "quality" settings)
  3. Whether optimized huffman tables are used.

It is highly likely your input settings were much different from the output settings.

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