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Konnor Rogers
Konnor Rogers

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at blog.konnor.site

PNG optimization from the command line

Installation

First step...install pngquant

If you're on MacOS, simply do:

brew install pngquant
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If you're not on MacOS, please refer to the pngquant homepage for installation instructions.

https://pngquant.org/

Running pngquant

The next step is to run pngquant on all your files you wish to optimize.

For example, if I have my .png files in my app/assets/images
directory, I would do the following:

cd app/assets/images

# Grab all png's by recursing through current directory.
# Quality and speed can be adjusted to personal needs.
# this is what I use.
pngquant ./**/*.png --quality 65-80 --speed 1
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This will generate a bunch of files with the -fs8.png suffix like so:

.
├── file-1.png
├── file-1-fs8.png
├── file-2.png
├── file-2-fs8.png
├── file-3.png
├── file-3-fs8.png
├── file-4.png
└── file-4-fs8.png
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Im sure theres a way to have pngquant overwrite your files, but this
lets me do an easy comparison of before / after sizes. Then I'll rename
the newly optimized files to overwrite their original file.

Bash Command

This is the command I use to rewrite all my newly optimized images to
overwrite their parent. Use with caution :)

for FILE in ./**/*-fs8.png; do original=${FILE%%-fs8.png}; mv "$FILE" "$original.png"; done
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Pulling it all together

Quick easy command to do it all at once.

pngquant ./**/*.png --quality 65-80 --speed 1
for FILE in ./**/*-fs8.png; do original=${FILE%%-fs8.png}; mv "$FILE" "$original.png"; done
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By using this method, I managed to get my ~2-4mb PNGs in a site I'm working on down to ~100-400kb.

Good luck and may your png files be forever optimized!

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