*always* sharpen?
Among many other things covered in the introduction to an online class I'm taking was the idea that you sharpen every single photo you take
:scratch
Did I miss this somewhere or perhaps is this something unique to this teacher? I understand sharpening before printing, but this was not about printing at all. Does anyone here do this or find themselves doing a LOT of sharpening?
thanks
:scratch
Did I miss this somewhere or perhaps is this something unique to this teacher? I understand sharpening before printing, but this was not about printing at all. Does anyone here do this or find themselves doing a LOT of sharpening?
thanks
//Leah
0
Comments
Sharpen RAW yes, but JPEG have already been sharpened in camera. Many can benefit for additional sharpening, in particular Unsharp mask if PS can be helpful
I always sharpen in Camera RAW (because raw files are soft SOOC) but in PS I don't do it for every photo... If I want it to look sharper than it does, I sharpen... if I think it looks good, I don't...
http://blog.timkphotography.com
I do capture sharpening in Adobe RAW converter ( or its equivalent in LR2 ) on every image I intend to process through to a saved image. If I intend to upload an image to smugmug, it will be sharpened in its pass through my Raw converter on the way. It may receive further creative sharpening before output as a final jpg in addition.
The conversion of an image to a data file in a camera sensor, results in some blurring due to the the way the data is captured by the sensor array. Capture sharpening restores the sharpness the image originally possessed before digitization.
If you are shooting jpgs, this is sharpening is being done for you by your camera according to the choices you have made for it.
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
1) A midtone sharpening action. http://visual-vacations.com/Photography/SharpeningActions.htm
2) A global and then localized USM sharpening (in 2 strengths, homegrown).
3) "Luko" sharpening action from this thread: http://www.treklens.com/workshops/72602/photo10976.htm
Generally the midtone sharpening works well without halos and on most images. I do alter it sometimes by eliminating some of the final steps of shadow-highlight recovery. I rarely use more than one action but if I do it is midtone first and then Luko.
I also tend to keep in-camera JPG sharpening down and use software sharpening later. I found that the in-camera sharpening tend to show the JPG aliasing artifacts more readily than computer/software sharpening.
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
However, the replies here - VERY enlightening! thank you one and all