Opinions please. Which is better -- using the sharpening modes in the G6 or doing it with editing like Photoshop Unsharp Mask?
Jim
jimsolt Senior Member 758 posts Joined Apr 2004 Location: Palm Beach County, FL More info | Jan 23, 2005 13:35 | #1 Opinions please. Which is better -- using the sharpening modes in the G6 or doing it with editing like Photoshop Unsharp Mask?
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Andy_T Compensating for his small ... sensor 9,860 posts Likes: 5 Joined Jan 2003 Location: Hannover Germany More info | Jan 23, 2005 14:49 | #2 Use RAW in the camera, convert to TIFF, apply USM later. some cameras, some lenses,
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bauerman discount on value meals 3,457 posts Likes: 2 Joined Apr 2003 Location: Idaho! More info | Jan 23, 2005 14:50 | #3 I would prefer to do it outside the camera in the post processing - as I have more control over the amount applied and I can "preview" the results better than with in-camera sharpening. I would rather start with a less sharp shot out of the cam - and then work my magic with it software-wise. That's just me........
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dbump Senior Member 755 posts Joined Apr 2003 Location: Denver, CO More info | If you're shooting in JPEG mode, be wary of disabling sharpening completely (not sure you can do that in later G-models, I think my G2 only has low/med/high). To roughly quote from Vince Brockaert's 123 Digital Imaging, the camera applies sharpening before jpeg compression. Applying sharpening only after compression could make the jpeg squares more visible. 7D, G10, 17-55 f/2.8 IS, 70-200 f/2.8 IS, 100 Macro, 50 f/1.4, 430EX II
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pcasciola POTN SHOPKEEPER 3,130 posts Joined Sep 2004 Location: Millstone Township, NJ More info | dbump wrote: If you're shooting in JPEG mode, be wary of disabling sharpening completely (not sure you can do that in later G-models, I think my G2 only has low/med/high). To roughly quote from Vince Brockaert's 123 Digital Imaging, the camera applies sharpening before jpeg compression. Applying sharpening only after compression could make the jpeg squares more visible. Obviously not a consideration with RAW... Hmmmm..... That's an interesting point. I've always been a fan of the least amount of in camera processing possible because I figure they have to be taking all kinds of shortcuts if Photoshop takes 100 times as long on a 3GHz PC to do the same operation that Canon's tiny CPU is doing, but this one could have some merit. I mostly shoot RAW but I often shoot JPEG outdoors now, so I may need to rethink that. Philip Casciola
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flowe Member 116 posts Joined Mar 2003 More info | For any editing such as rotation, perspective and probably most other, the (SL) jpeg file preferrably is as soft as possible. This results in the least gradients between image features, and on remapping the least effort and best result in interpolation. Any amount of in-cam sharpening requires so to say undoing this first and later redoing it again - with the obvious losses. The same applies to noise, accentuated by any in-cam sharpening. Better denoise the softer file first and sharpen it afterwards.
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flowe wrote: Therefore with the G6 (and G3 before) I keep Func/Custom Effect/Sharpness always in "minus" position. This is probably is very close to "no in-cam sharpening" for jpeg files, and may even benefit the jpeg process itself and the resulting overall quality. Normal and plus sharpness settings to me only seem appropriate for outside printing of unedited pictures - because this is the standard they rely on. Till now, I had assumed the Function/No Effect setting eliminated sharpening. Does it? I can't find instructions for setting Custom effects anywhere, so I have "till now" ignored this setting.
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Andy_T Compensating for his small ... sensor 9,860 posts Likes: 5 Joined Jan 2003 Location: Hannover Germany More info | Some basic consideration ... some cameras, some lenses,
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Andy, I agree with you about RAW being the way to go, and when I ask myself why I think this way, I conclude it is to start with the purest image possible. That said (or thought out) in camera sharpening seems out of the question. I was surprised to find that in RAW mode of the G6 I have the option of introducing low sharpening. I guess there might be some use for this, but I can't think of one.
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flowe Member 116 posts Joined Mar 2003 More info | Jim wrote: I can't find instructions for setting Custom effects anywhere, so I have "till now" ignored this setting. Till now, I had assumed the Function/No Effect setting eliminated sharpening. Does it?As customary, the G6 manual is not clear. Page 100 explains how to open Custom Effects with Contrast, Sharpness and Saturation, each with the options MINUS (termed "weak" in the manual) - 0 ("normal") - PLUS ("strong").
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