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Colorful Image Colorization PyTorch

This is a from-scratch PyTorch implementation of "Colorful Image Colorization" [1] by Zhang et al. created for the Deep Learning in Data Science course at KTH Stockholm.

The following sections describe in detail:

Prerequisites

We recommend you use Anaconda to create a virtual enviroment in which to install the modules needed to run this program, i.e you should run:

conda env create --file environment.yml

There are some extra dependencies needed to run some of the scripts but you should install those manually when it becomes necessary as you may not need them.

In addition, you will need some files provided by R. Zhang, these include the points of the ab gamut bins used to discretize the image labels and pretrained Caffe models. Run resources/get_resources.sh to download these automatically. If you skip this step you will not be able to run the network at all, even if you provide your own weight initialization or want to train from scratch.

You might also notice another shell script, data/get_cval.sh, that downloads several additional resources. However, this is mainly a remnant of the developement process and you can safely ignore it.

In order to use the pretrained weights for prediction, you will have to convert them from Caffe to PyTorch. We provide the convenience script scripts/convert_weights for exactly this purpose. In order to use it you will have to install the caffe Python module (if you want to convert one of the Caffe models provided by R. Zhang)

For example, in order to convert the Caffe model trained with class rebalancing downloaded by resources/get_resources.sh, you can call the script like this:

./scripts/convert_weights vgg PYTORCH_WEIGHTS.tar \
	--weights resources/colorization_release_v2.caffemodel \
	--proto resources/colorization_deploy_v2.prototxt

Which will save the converted PyTorch weights to PYTORCH_WEIGHTS.tar.

Colorize Images with Pretrained Weights

The easiest way to colorize several grayscale images of arbitrary size is to place them in the same directory and colorize them in batch mode using scripts/convert_images. For example, if you have placed the images in directory dir1 and subsequently run:

./scripts/convert_images predict_color \
    --input-dir dir1 \
    --output-dir dir2 \
    --model-checkpoint PYTORCH_WEIGHTS.tar \
    --gpu \
    --verbose

The script will colorize all images in dir1 on the GPU and place the results in dir2 (with the same filenames). You can choose an annealed mean temperature parameter other then the default 0.38 with --annealed-mean-T. .

Train the Network

Prepare a Dataset

If you intend to train the network on your own dataset, you might want to use the convenience scripts scripts/prepare_dataset to convert it into a form suitable for training. For example, if all your images are stored in a directory tree similar to this one:

dir1/
├── subdir1
│   ├── img1.JPEG
│   ├── img2.JPEG
│   └── ...
├── subdir2
│   ├── img1.JPEG
│   ├── img2.JPEG
│   └── ...
└── ...

you may want to run:

./scripts/prepare_dataset dir1 \
    --flatten \
    --purge \
    --clean \
    --file-ext JPEG \
    --val-split 0.2 \
    --test-split 0.1 \
    --resize-height 256 \
    --resize-width 256 \
    --verbose

The script will first recursively look for images files with the extension .JPEG in dir1 and remove all other files and those images that cannot be read or converted to RGB. It will then resize all remaining images to 256x256 and randomly place them in the newly created subdirectories train, val and test using a 70/20/10 split.

Note that this will take a while for large datasets since every single image has to be read into memory. If your images already have the desired size (this does not necessarily have to be 256x256, the network is fully convolutional and can train on images of arbitrary size) and you are sure that none of them are corrupted, you don't have to use the --resize-height/--resize-width and --clean arguments which will speed up the process considerably.

Run the Training

To train the network on your dataset you can use the script scripts/run_training. The script accepts command line arguments that control e.g. the duration of the training and where/how often logfiles and model checkpoints are written. More specific settings like dataloader configuration, network type and optimizer settings need to be specified via a configuration file which is essentially a nested directory of Python objects converted to JSON. Most likely you will want to use config/default.json and provide specific settings or override some defaults in a separate JSON file. See config/vgg.json for an example.

Once you have decided on a configuration file you can run the script as follows:

./scripts/run_training \
    --config YOUR_CONFIG.json \
    --default-config config/default.json \
    --data-dir dir1 \
    --checkpoint-dir YOUR_CHECKPOINT_DIR \
    --log-file YOUR_LOG_FILE.txt \
    --iterations ITERATIONS \
    --iterations-till-checkpoint ITERATIONS_TILL_CHECKPOINT \
    --init-model-checkpoint INIT_MODEL-CHECKPOINT.tar

This will recursively merge the configurations in YOUR_CONFIG.json and config/default.json and then train on the the images in dir1 for ITERATIONS iterations (batches). Every ITERATIONS_TILL_CHECKPOINT iterations, an intermediate model checkpoint will be written to YOUR_CHECKPOINT_DIR. Specifying --init-model-checkpoint is optional but useful if you want to finetune the network from some pretrained set of weights.

You can also continue training from an arbitrary training checkpoint using the --continue-training flag which will load network weights and optimizer state from INIT_MODEL_CHECKPOINT.tar (which has to be a checkpoint created by a previous run of scripts/run_training) and pick the training up from the last training iteration (thus ITERATIONS still specifies the total number of training iterations).

Colorize Images Programmatically

Colorizing images programmatically using our implementation is very simple. You first need to instantiate the network itself:

from colorization import ColorizationNetwork

network = ColorizationNetwork(annealed_mean_T=0.38, device='gpu')

The parameters should be self explanatory (and are in this case optional), use device='cpu' if you plan to run the network on the CPU.

You will then need to wrap the network in an instance of ColorizationModel which implements (among other things) checkpoint saving/loading:

from colorization import ColorizationModel

model = ColorizationModel(network)
model.load_checkpoint('YOUR_CHECKPOINT_DIR/checkpoint_final.tar')

In order to colorize a grayscale image you should then:

All of this is already implemented in a convenience function:

from colorization predict_color
from skimage.io import imread

img = imread('YOUR_IMAGE.jpg')
img_colorized = predict_color(model, img)

References

[1] Colorful Image Colorization, Zhang, Richard and Isola, Phillip and Efros, Alexei A, in ECCV 2016 (website)