168

I'm using PIL. How do I turn the EXIF data of a picture into a dictionary?

2

10 Answers 10

228

You can use the _getexif() protected method of a PIL Image.

import PIL.Image
img = PIL.Image.open('img.jpg')
exif_data = img._getexif()

This should give you a dictionary indexed by EXIF numeric tags. If you want the dictionary indexed by the actual EXIF tag name strings, try something like:

import PIL.ExifTags
exif = {
    PIL.ExifTags.TAGS[k]: v
    for k, v in img._getexif().items()
    if k in PIL.ExifTags.TAGS
}
13
  • 13
    Any Python 3 alternative? Aug 30, 2013 at 4:57
  • 2
    @2rs2ts: Try import ExifTags (without the PIL prefix). Nov 9, 2013 at 22:09
  • 19
    For python3 use Pillow. It is a fork of PIL, which is still being developed, and has a python3 compatible version
    – Mzzl
    Jan 15, 2014 at 9:54
  • 8
    Just for reference exif codes: awaresystems.be/imaging/tiff/tifftags/privateifd/exif.html
    – Deus777
    May 6, 2017 at 21:47
  • 5
    This doesn't work with python 3.x and _get_exif is a protected method and shouldn't be used. May 15, 2019 at 19:12
55

For Python3.x and starting Pillow==6.0.0, Image objects now provide a "public"/official getexif() method that returns a <class 'PIL.Image.Exif'> instance or None if the image has no EXIF data.

From Pillow 6.0.0 release notes:

getexif() has been added, which returns an Exif instance. Values can be retrieved and set like a dictionary. When saving JPEG, PNG or WEBP, the instance can be passed as an exif argument to include any changes in the output image.

As stated, you can iterate over the key-value pairs of the Exif instance like a regular dictionary. The keys are 16-bit integers that can be mapped to their string names using the ExifTags.TAGS module.

from PIL import Image, ExifTags

img = Image.open("sample.jpg")
img_exif = img.getexif()
print(type(img_exif))
# <class 'PIL.Image.Exif'>

if img_exif is None:
    print('Sorry, image has no exif data.')
else:
    for key, val in img_exif.items():
        if key in ExifTags.TAGS:
            print(f'{ExifTags.TAGS[key]}:{val}')
            # ExifVersion:b'0230'
            # ...
            # FocalLength:(2300, 100)
            # ColorSpace:1
            # ...
            # Model:'X-T2'
            # Make:'FUJIFILM'
            # LensSpecification:(18.0, 55.0, 2.8, 4.0)
            # ...
            # DateTime:'2019:12:01 21:30:07'
            # ...

Tested with Python 3.8.8 and Pillow==8.1.0.

4
  • 6
    It doesn't work for me, I can see only the exif data using the .info method in binary
    – G M
    Mar 16, 2020 at 20:23
  • 1
    This omits many fields that show in Windows properties: lat/long, F-stop, ISO speed, Exposure time etc Oct 9, 2022 at 22:09
  • 1
    @InnocentBystander It might be because of the checking against ExifTags.TAGS. It skips out on unknown keys, and doesn't print them out. Try adding an else block that prints out the raw key and val. I unfortunately don't work on this kind of thing anymore, don't know how to "fix" it. Oct 9, 2022 at 23:58
  • 1
    @InnocentBystander The above code is outputting tags such as FNumber, ISOSpeedRatings, ExposureTime, and GPSInfo for me, along with all the obvious tags like Flash, MeteringMode, FocalLength, Make, Copyright, Artist, Orientation, etc. etc. I'm using Pillow 7.2.0 (as shown by command "pip show pillow"). In fact, there are a some fields the above python code shows me that Window's property->Details does NOT show such as lens model... Feb 19 at 14:25
44

You can also use the ExifRead module:

import exifread
# Open image file for reading (binary mode)
f = open(path_name, 'rb')

# Return Exif tags
tags = exifread.process_file(f)
6
  • 1
    Can you test this on this Question, download the images, and try to get the ImageDescription. stackoverflow.com/questions/22173902/…
    – A.J.
    Mar 6, 2014 at 7:20
  • 3
    @Clayton for both the images, exifread returns empty dictionary. But I tested on my photos and it works just fine.
    – tnq177
    Nov 16, 2015 at 1:31
  • I also receive an empty dictionary for a set of images. Can anyone comment of why this is the case? What kind of images does exifread.process_file() work with?
    – Momchill
    Mar 22, 2020 at 23:56
  • 1
    @Momchill It depends on the image file. Some images are generated without EXIF data. If it is empty programmatically, try opening the image file in a photo editing software to check if it actually has EXIF data. Sep 6, 2020 at 0:03
  • After necessary imports and loading the image: print("\n".join([(ExifTags.TAGS[k] + f": {v}") for (k, v) in img00.getexif().items() if k in ExifTags.TAGS]))
    – khaz
    Apr 23, 2022 at 1:10
21

I use this:

import os,sys
from PIL import Image
from PIL.ExifTags import TAGS

for (k,v) in Image.open(sys.argv[1])._getexif().items():
        print('%s = %s' % (TAGS.get(k), v))

or to get a specific field:

def get_field (exif,field) :
  for (k,v) in exif.items():
     if TAGS.get(k) == field:
        return v

exif = image._getexif()
print get_field(exif,'ExposureTime')
3
  • 6
    Better, you can reverse TAGS with name2tagnum = dict((name, num) for num, name in TAGS.iteritems()) and then do name2tagnum['ExposureTime'].
    – Ben
    Dec 8, 2013 at 13:21
  • 7
    For Python 3, change exif.iteritems() to exif.items()
    – SPRBRN
    Feb 19, 2018 at 15:38
  • 3
    We should not use _getexif which is a private method. Instead Pillow's method getexif is more appropriate.
    – guhur
    Jan 4, 2021 at 8:43
15
import sys
import PIL
import PIL.Image as PILimage
from PIL import ImageDraw, ImageFont, ImageEnhance
from PIL.ExifTags import TAGS, GPSTAGS



class Worker(object):
    def __init__(self, img):
        self.img = img
        self.exif_data = self.get_exif_data()
        self.lat = self.get_lat()
        self.lon = self.get_lon()
        self.date =self.get_date_time()
        super(Worker, self).__init__()

    @staticmethod
    def get_if_exist(data, key):
        if key in data:
            return data[key]
        return None

    @staticmethod
    def convert_to_degress(value):
        """Helper function to convert the GPS coordinates
        stored in the EXIF to degress in float format"""
        d0 = value[0][0]
        d1 = value[0][1]
        d = float(d0) / float(d1)
        m0 = value[1][0]
        m1 = value[1][1]
        m = float(m0) / float(m1)

        s0 = value[2][0]
        s1 = value[2][1]
        s = float(s0) / float(s1)

        return d + (m / 60.0) + (s / 3600.0)

    def get_exif_data(self):
        """Returns a dictionary from the exif data of an PIL Image item. Also
        converts the GPS Tags"""
        exif_data = {}
        info = self.img._getexif()
        if info:
            for tag, value in info.items():
                decoded = TAGS.get(tag, tag)
                if decoded == "GPSInfo":
                    gps_data = {}
                    for t in value:
                        sub_decoded = GPSTAGS.get(t, t)
                        gps_data[sub_decoded] = value[t]

                    exif_data[decoded] = gps_data
                else:
                    exif_data[decoded] = value
        return exif_data

    def get_lat(self):
        """Returns the latitude and longitude, if available, from the 
        provided exif_data (obtained through get_exif_data above)"""
        # print(exif_data)
        if 'GPSInfo' in self.exif_data:
            gps_info = self.exif_data["GPSInfo"]
            gps_latitude = self.get_if_exist(gps_info, "GPSLatitude")
            gps_latitude_ref = self.get_if_exist(gps_info, 'GPSLatitudeRef')
            if gps_latitude and gps_latitude_ref:
                lat = self.convert_to_degress(gps_latitude)
                if gps_latitude_ref != "N":
                    lat = 0 - lat
                lat = str(f"{lat:.{5}f}")
                return lat
        else:
            return None

    def get_lon(self):
        """Returns the latitude and longitude, if available, from the 
        provided exif_data (obtained through get_exif_data above)"""
        # print(exif_data)
        if 'GPSInfo' in self.exif_data:
            gps_info = self.exif_data["GPSInfo"]
            gps_longitude = self.get_if_exist(gps_info, 'GPSLongitude')
            gps_longitude_ref = self.get_if_exist(gps_info, 'GPSLongitudeRef')
            if gps_longitude and gps_longitude_ref:
                lon = self.convert_to_degress(gps_longitude)
                if gps_longitude_ref != "E":
                    lon = 0 - lon
                lon = str(f"{lon:.{5}f}")
                return lon
        else:
            return None

    def get_date_time(self):
        if 'DateTime' in self.exif_data:
            date_and_time = self.exif_data['DateTime']
            return date_and_time 

if __name__ == '__main__':
    try:
        img = PILimage.open(sys.argv[1])
        image = Worker(img)
        lat = image.lat
        lon = image.lon
        date = image.date
        print(date, lat, lon)

    except Exception as e:
        print(e)
10

I have found that using ._getexif doesn't work in higher python versions, moreover, it is a protected class and one should avoid using it if possible. After digging around the debugger this is what I found to be the best way to get the EXIF data for an image:

from PIL import Image

def get_exif(path):
    return Image.open(path).info['parsed_exif']

This returns a dictionary of all the EXIF data of an image.

Note: For Python3.x use Pillow instead of PIL

2
  • 4
    info['parsed_exif'] requires Pillow 6.0 or newer. info['exif'] is available in 5.4, but this is a raw bytestring.
    – Åsmund
    Jul 14, 2019 at 8:52
  • 3
    There is no info['parsed_exif'] in version 7.0.0; only info['exif'].
    – ZF007
    Mar 10, 2020 at 23:32
8

Here's the one that may be little easier to read. Hope this is helpful.

from PIL import Image
from PIL import ExifTags

exifData = {}
img = Image.open(picture.jpg)
exifDataRaw = img._getexif()
for tag, value in exifDataRaw.items():
    decodedTag = ExifTags.TAGS.get(tag, tag)
    exifData[decodedTag] = value
2

To read image url and get tags

from PIL import Image
from urllib.request import urlopen
from PIL.ExifTags import TAGS 


def get_exif(filename):
    image = Image.open(filename)
    image.verify()
    return image._getexif()

def get_labeled_exif(exif):
    labeled = {}
    for (key, val) in exif.items():
        labeled[TAGS.get(key)] = val

    return labeled

my_image= urlopen(url)

exif = get_exif(my_image)
labeled = get_labeled_exif(exif)
print(labeled)

and to get GPS coordinate, Jayson DeLancey has excellent blog post.

1
  • 2
    The link to resource you mentioned is broken.
    – arilwan
    Aug 20, 2022 at 0:13
2

Feb 2023 Pillow information

Starting version 8.2.0 API of PIL changed slightly, hiding most of tags a bit deeper into methods of Exif. All other answers became slightly outdated, showing only few tags (around 14).

The modern way of doing it:

from PIL import Image
from PIL.ExifTags import TAGS, GPSTAGS, IFD
from pillow_heif import register_heif_opener    # HEIF support

register_heif_opener()                          # HEIF support

def print_exif(fname: str):
    img = Image.open(fname)
    exif = img.getexif()

    print('>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>', 'Base tags', '<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<')
    for k, v in exif.items():
        tag = TAGS.get(k, k)
        print(tag, v)

    for ifd_id in IFD:
        print('>>>>>>>>>', ifd_id.name, '<<<<<<<<<<')
        try:
            ifd = exif.get_ifd(ifd_id)

            if ifd_id == IFD.GPSInfo:
                resolve = GPSTAGS
            else:
                resolve = TAGS

            for k, v in ifd.items():
                tag = resolve.get(k, k)
                print(tag, v)
        except KeyError:
            pass

Only some of useful tags are available on the root level of Exif now (e.g. Make, Model, DateTime, Orientation, Software. In order to access other useful tags, such as ShutterSpeedValue, ApertureValue, ISOSpeedRatings, WhiteBalance, DateTimeOriginal, DateTimeDigitized, ExposureBiasValue, FocalLength, ExifImageWidth, ExifImageHeight, etc, you need to get an IFD called Exif. For GPS information, use IFD GPSInfo. Also note that GPS tags have another tag-to-int encoding dictionary.

These two lines

from pillow_heif import register_heif_opener

register_heif_opener() 

are required only if you want to have support of HEIF format, that is configured by default on modern Apple devices (.HEIC file extension). If you don't need to work with HEIF, you can omit them, the code will work for the rest of image formats supported by PIL.

Package references:

2
  • getting an error "cannot import name 'IFD' from 'PIL.ExifTags'". I'm using Pillow 9.3. Any advice? Mar 13 at 0:12
  • Nevermind...I believe this is a version issue. The above works for Pillow 9.4 Mar 13 at 2:05
0

I usually use pyexiv2 to set exif information in JPG files, but when I import the library in a script QGIS script crash.

I found a solution using the library exif:

https://pypi.org/project/exif/

It's so easy to use, and with Qgis I don,'t have any problem.

In this code I insert GPS coordinates to a snapshot of screen:

from exif import Image
with open(file_name, 'rb') as image_file:
    my_image = Image(image_file)

my_image.make = "Python"
my_image.gps_latitude_ref=exif_lat_ref
my_image.gps_latitude=exif_lat
my_image.gps_longitude_ref= exif_lon_ref
my_image.gps_longitude= exif_lon

with open(file_name, 'wb') as new_image_file:
    new_image_file.write(my_image.get_file())

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