I have seen some terribly blurry portraits turned into crystal clear ones. Much clearer than Topaz AI Sharpen or denoise can even come close to. Anyone know what the trick is??
Sorry I did not make myself clear. I restore old photos of people taken years ago. They are blurry when I get them and I have no control over how they were taken since the photographer in many cases is dead and gone. I am attaching a before and after that someone fixed, and I hope to find out how it was done. Neither Topaz Ai Sharpen or deniose come close nor does Photoshop. (Maybe I am doing something wrong?) Please help and thank you for your replies
sodapop wrote:
Sorry I did not make myself clear. I restore old photos of people taken years ago. They are blurry when I get them and I have no control over how they were taken since the photographer in many cases is dead and gone. I am attaching a before and after that someone fixed, and I hope to find out how it was done. Neither Topaz Ai Sharpen or deniose come close nor does Photoshop. (Maybe I am doing something wrong?) Please help and thank you for your replies
WOW, I do not know but also would like to know.
Who did this for you and ask them.
sodapop wrote:
Sorry I did not make myself clear. I restore old photos of people taken years ago. They are blurry when I get them and I have no control over how they were taken since the photographer in many cases is dead and gone. I am attaching a before and after that someone fixed, and I hope to find out how it was done. Neither Topaz Ai Sharpen or deniose come close nor does Photoshop. (Maybe I am doing something wrong?) Please help and thank you for your replies
With an example, it makes more sense. I've seen this type of 'sharpening' from my Epson Scanner, but never so pronounced and successfully done. Having only scanned 35mm negatives, if this was an Espon result, it seems the larger image source delivered better results, possibly with further digital editing work against the file after scanning to a digital format.
Look at the 'shaping' of the noise and chin, shaping would be my term, rather than sharpening. I've seen exactly these added lines / details coming out of my Epson v600 scans, many times in the same areas.
Wow! Impressive! Be great to know how.
Architect1776 wrote:
WOW, I do not know but also would like to know.
Who did this for you and ask them.
Waiting with "a"bated breath!
Thanks for all the replies. I have asked this person but it is someone I do not know and so they aren't Talken'. Not to divulge something like this to a stranger would not surprise me, I will keep you posted. I wondered it has something like blending edges or with a style found in Photoshop? Cartoon blend?. This is not the only one I have seen, have seen some from others as well. Stay tuned
!
I am even waiting with bad breath, but that is another subject
Your question was very clear, unlike some replies. There is a lot of AI sharpening or focus correcting out there that goes way beyond an unsharp mask. You might want to see if there are any news releases from the CES show in Las Vegas. Other times, you can tell a new version is coming out when the existing version is drastically reduced in price. Try googling AI focus correcting and them AI shrapening and see what pops up. Some of it may online only.
sodapop wrote:
I have seen some terribly blurry portraits turned into crystal clear ones. Much clearer than Topaz AI Sharpen or denoise can even come close to. Anyone know what the trick is??
The "restored" image looks impossible to me. And for more many reasons and from experience using many physical and software tools.
lamiaceae wrote:
Reshoot, or close your eyes and imagine clarity.
Tell me how I can reshoot a photo that was taken in 1920?
radiojohn wrote:
Your question was very clear, unlike some replies. There is a lot of AI sharpening or focus correcting out there that goes way beyond an unsharp mask. You might want to see if there are any news releases from the CES show in Las Vegas. Other times, you can tell a new version is coming out when the existing version is drastically reduced in price. Try googling AI focus correcting and them AI shrapening and see what pops up. Some of it may online only.
In my original question I clearly stated that Topaz and photshop could not achieve this. Please read original statements more carefully.
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