Threshold slider
joshhuntnm
Registered Users Posts: 1,924 Major grins
I know one answer to this question is: it depends
But, here goes: what i your default setting for the threshold slider in the unsharp mask. I routinely sharpen at about 100%, 1 px, but don't really have a feel for what is normal on the Threshold slider. I am assuming the shot is pretty normal, in focus, you just want to crisp it up slightly.
But, here goes: what i your default setting for the threshold slider in the unsharp mask. I routinely sharpen at about 100%, 1 px, but don't really have a feel for what is normal on the Threshold slider. I am assuming the shot is pretty normal, in focus, you just want to crisp it up slightly.
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You'd be better off reading our sharpening tutorials, searching our forums for sharpening discussions and searching the wider internet for a basic primer on sharpening than you would be to isolate one small aspect of a rather complex issue.
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Sharpening is typically done at several stages these days - Capture Sharpenining in RAW to restore the sharpness lost due to digital capture, creative sharpening of selected portions of the image for artistic reasons, and output sharpening for sending to a printer. Each of these may be best served by different values and techniques.
The best explanation I have seen recently is the two videos by Michael Reichman and Jeff Schewe in the Luminous Landscape. Both are quite worthwwhile for improving the technical quality of your images.
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Duffy
I followed your advice. The rule of thumb I found was to start about 3. One other thing i didn't realize was that the lower the number the more the sharpening.
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I don't think this is a helpful way to think of the threshold slider. My understanding is that the lower the number the greater the number of "edges" that are sharpened. An edge being an area of contrast. What you are setting with that slider is the definition of an edge that the algorithm uses to determine where to apply sharpening. The higher the number, the more contrast is necessary before sharpening is applied to the "edge."
The "amount" always controls the degree of sharpening. That is: the amount of contrast applied.
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