Progression of a capture toward printing...
This is an extended answer to a thread over printing and cropping.
First I was surprised that no one mentioned that SOOC will determines the quality of your print as well as its accuracy. If you frame your subject close to filling the frame you are opening yourself to a world of trouble, if not the impossibility to create the intended printed output.
Then you have the Post processing that will allow to modify the initial capture in order to have something half decent to work with, an image. This includes global and local post processing as needed. When I was reading that folks did only 'global' PP before creating the ratio and dismissed the 'detail work' as worthless before resizing needless to say that I was surprised. Still, to each their own, so I am just surprised by these comments.
One made a comment that is often ignored but really important. Once resized an image needs to be sharpened - again -. This cannot be more emphasized. Reducing an image size will reduce the sharpness. Compare the last two images to see the difference.
Original SOOC
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Initial post processed image
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7x5 ratio and crop, not resized. Red frame is only an indication for frame borders.
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UHH resized from the above image... Notice that since UHH did not have to resize the quality is ever so slightly better than usual.
Image resized to 7x5 and 300dpi. The image DL is soft.
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Same image, sharpened. It could be sent to a printer.
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I had never noticed before that resizing an image can soften it but I'll watch out for that from now on - especially as I need to resize any image I want to enter into my local club competitions. Thanks for the tip.
Bad SOOC. This image is not exploitable but on the WEB...
Thanks for the info. I am a newbee so forgive me but what is SOOC?
tom cody wrote:
Thanks for the info. I am a newbee so forgive me but what is SOOC?
"Straight out of camera," no post processing.
Qimage will provide size-specific sharpening of the final print image based on analysis of the file.
Rongnongno wrote:
......Once resized an image needs to be sharpened - again - Reducing an image size will reduce the sharpness.....
A valid point that's very easily overlooked.
bdk
Loc: Sanibel Fl.
what Ive found is sometimes I sharpen, then do edits, then resize then sharpen again and I get noise that wasn't there when I started.
I use topaz to sharpen, inside PS CS6, have u had that problem? It may be topaz, i'm not sure.
bdk wrote:
what Ive found is sometimes I sharpen, then do edits, then resize then sharpen again and I get noise that wasn't there when I started.
I use topaz to sharpen, inside PS CS6, have u had that problem? It may be topaz, i'm not sure.
I do not use plug ins so I cannot answer your question. Sorry.
Anyone else?
Rongnongno wrote:
I do not use plug ins so I cannot answer your question. Sorry.
Anyone else?
Perhaps bdk isn't seeing the obvious, which is that if you zoom in by cropping, noise becomes more obvious, and on top of that, sharpening makes noise worse too.
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