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10/06/2005 12:03:48 PM · #1 |
Do you find that you can leave one preset on the sharpening tool or do you need to cahnge it for different lenses or cameras or each photo?
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10/06/2005 12:04:59 PM · #2 |
In camera or in PP?
I should clarify I don't know if you can sharpen in camera LOL.
For me I have a standard setting that I tweak according to each pic. Lots of white would get a different setting than a portrait or blades of grass etc.
Message edited by author 2005-10-06 12:06:04. |
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10/06/2005 12:28:07 PM · #3 |
MOST cameras have adjustable levels of shaprpening nowadays, Mel. Yours certainly does.
I find it best to turn sharpening off, or as low as it goes, and do it in Photoshop as best suits the given image. If you're workign with jpegs, you can't unsharpen something that is sharpened in-camera, but you can always revert in PS.
As to how much sharpening is "right", that's endlessly variable. I use different shaprepning for DPC 640-pixel viewing than I do for printing. I used different sharpening for larger/smaller prints a lot of the time. And I use more/less sharpening depending on the surface I'm printing too, matte vs glossy and so forth. So I just prefer to do it in PS.
Robt.
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10/06/2005 12:33:45 PM · #4 |
See Robt. I knew I'd read it somewhere ;-) I better to see if it's on or not. |
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10/06/2005 01:34:35 PM · #5 |
Sorry I ment to say in photoshop.
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