MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,171
How do you sharpen?
For those unfamiliar with the concept, sharpening is something that you do to pictures to make them look, well, sharper. One of the problems with translating the real world into a bunch of dots (which is all a picture is), is that the process blurs everything a bit. Most digital cameras make the problem even worse by using a filter to intentionally blurr things a bit. That helps prevent some other weird problems. There are also problems when you print. The dots on ink jet printers run a bit together and that has the effect of blurring things a bit.
The traditional method for sharpening in Photoshop is the "unsharp mask" filter. It seems like an odd name for a filter designed to sharpen things, but it's named for the process used in film processing in which used an unsharp (slightly out-of-focus) copy of the picture to help sharpen it. The technique works by finding places in the picture with lots of contrast (abrupt changes from light to dark) and increasing the contrast a little more (making the light side a little lighter and the dark side a little darker).
There are three adjustments you can make with the unsharp mask filter. The first is the amount. It controls how much the filter darkens the dark side and lightens the light side of high contrast areas.
The next adjustment is the radius. The radius controls how far from the high contrast area the adjustment will cover. A high radius will lighten and darken pixels farther from the edges than a low radius does.
The final adjustment is the threshold. This setting determines how much of a difference between light and dark areas there must be before the filter will work on them.
There isn't an optimal setting for these values. It all depends on the picture and the purpose for sharpening. I would recommend starting with something like 100%, 1.0, and 25 as your base values and play with them to see how they work for you. When you do that, always, always, always make the adjustments while looking at 100% magnification of your picture. If you don't, you won't really be able to see what is happening because the rescaling that occurs to show your picture at magnifications other than 100% makes it impossible to see the true effects of your sharpening.
As a general rule, use smaller radius values for pictures with more detail and larger radius values for pictures with less detail.
If you are going to do any noise reduction, it is important to do that before you sharpen your photo. Otherwise, the filter will confuse the noise with detail and enhance it. That makes the noise even worse.
I actually do three rounds of sharpening on important photos. When I first bring the photo into the computer, I perform an initial, fairly minimal round of sharpening called "capture sharpening." That helps remove the effect of the anti-aliasing filter.
For the second round of sharpening, I sharpen more aggressively, but only in the areas that I want sharpened. Using a mask, I sharpen only the detail that I want sharp. There isn't much point in sharpening out-of-focus areas. You'll also find that your photography budget goes down dramatically if you sharpen your spouse's skin. No one really needs to see every detail of their pores, blemishes, and wrinkles. Sharpen the eyes, mouth, and hair and leave the skin alone. Heck, you can actually boost your budget by applying a very subtle blur to skin.
If you want, you can even use different sharpening parameters for different parts of the photo you want sharpened. Perhaps you want the texture of your subjects shirt to really stand out, but you don't want their hair to look to crunchy. In that case, you could sharpen them both on different layers with different parameters. That's a bit more work than I'm willing to perform, but I'm sure your standards are higher than mine so I thought I'd suggest it.
After those two rounds, I'll save my photo. The final round of sharpening is something that I do differently for every different version of the photo. This round, called output sharpening, is something that is done after the final resizing. If I'm posting an 800 x 600 photo for some Internet contest, I'll use one set of parameters. If I'm printing a 3,000 x 2,400 pixel photo on my 300 dpi printer, I'll use a different set of parameters.
Sharpening for display on the computer is easy because you can see the affects of your adjustment. Sharpening for printing is a little harder because you have to guess at how much your printer is going to undo the effects of your sharpening when it prints. Every printer and driver is different, so you'll have to learn by trail and error.
Real World Image Sharpening with Adobe Photoshop CS2 by the late Bruce Fraser is the best book that I know of on the subject. There are innumerable tutorials all over the web that also explain the subject in much more detail than I've provided.
There are also numerous Photoshop plug-ins to help you with your sharpening. Avoid any that do a one-size fits all sharpening because the optimal amount of sharpening is different for different subjects, different resolutions, and different output devices. I really like PhotoKit Sharpener. At $99, it is a bit pricey, especially considering that it doesn't do anything that you can't do in Photoshop without it. I find, however, that it makes sharpening much easier and I get better results than when I do it myself.
So how do you sharpen?
For those unfamiliar with the concept, sharpening is something that you do to pictures to make them look, well, sharper. One of the problems with translating the real world into a bunch of dots (which is all a picture is), is that the process blurs everything a bit. Most digital cameras make the problem even worse by using a filter to intentionally blurr things a bit. That helps prevent some other weird problems. There are also problems when you print. The dots on ink jet printers run a bit together and that has the effect of blurring things a bit.
The traditional method for sharpening in Photoshop is the "unsharp mask" filter. It seems like an odd name for a filter designed to sharpen things, but it's named for the process used in film processing in which used an unsharp (slightly out-of-focus) copy of the picture to help sharpen it. The technique works by finding places in the picture with lots of contrast (abrupt changes from light to dark) and increasing the contrast a little more (making the light side a little lighter and the dark side a little darker).
There are three adjustments you can make with the unsharp mask filter. The first is the amount. It controls how much the filter darkens the dark side and lightens the light side of high contrast areas.
The next adjustment is the radius. The radius controls how far from the high contrast area the adjustment will cover. A high radius will lighten and darken pixels farther from the edges than a low radius does.
The final adjustment is the threshold. This setting determines how much of a difference between light and dark areas there must be before the filter will work on them.
There isn't an optimal setting for these values. It all depends on the picture and the purpose for sharpening. I would recommend starting with something like 100%, 1.0, and 25 as your base values and play with them to see how they work for you. When you do that, always, always, always make the adjustments while looking at 100% magnification of your picture. If you don't, you won't really be able to see what is happening because the rescaling that occurs to show your picture at magnifications other than 100% makes it impossible to see the true effects of your sharpening.
As a general rule, use smaller radius values for pictures with more detail and larger radius values for pictures with less detail.
If you are going to do any noise reduction, it is important to do that before you sharpen your photo. Otherwise, the filter will confuse the noise with detail and enhance it. That makes the noise even worse.
I actually do three rounds of sharpening on important photos. When I first bring the photo into the computer, I perform an initial, fairly minimal round of sharpening called "capture sharpening." That helps remove the effect of the anti-aliasing filter.
For the second round of sharpening, I sharpen more aggressively, but only in the areas that I want sharpened. Using a mask, I sharpen only the detail that I want sharp. There isn't much point in sharpening out-of-focus areas. You'll also find that your photography budget goes down dramatically if you sharpen your spouse's skin. No one really needs to see every detail of their pores, blemishes, and wrinkles. Sharpen the eyes, mouth, and hair and leave the skin alone. Heck, you can actually boost your budget by applying a very subtle blur to skin.
If you want, you can even use different sharpening parameters for different parts of the photo you want sharpened. Perhaps you want the texture of your subjects shirt to really stand out, but you don't want their hair to look to crunchy. In that case, you could sharpen them both on different layers with different parameters. That's a bit more work than I'm willing to perform, but I'm sure your standards are higher than mine so I thought I'd suggest it.
After those two rounds, I'll save my photo. The final round of sharpening is something that I do differently for every different version of the photo. This round, called output sharpening, is something that is done after the final resizing. If I'm posting an 800 x 600 photo for some Internet contest, I'll use one set of parameters. If I'm printing a 3,000 x 2,400 pixel photo on my 300 dpi printer, I'll use a different set of parameters.
Sharpening for display on the computer is easy because you can see the affects of your adjustment. Sharpening for printing is a little harder because you have to guess at how much your printer is going to undo the effects of your sharpening when it prints. Every printer and driver is different, so you'll have to learn by trail and error.
Real World Image Sharpening with Adobe Photoshop CS2 by the late Bruce Fraser is the best book that I know of on the subject. There are innumerable tutorials all over the web that also explain the subject in much more detail than I've provided.
There are also numerous Photoshop plug-ins to help you with your sharpening. Avoid any that do a one-size fits all sharpening because the optimal amount of sharpening is different for different subjects, different resolutions, and different output devices. I really like PhotoKit Sharpener. At $99, it is a bit pricey, especially considering that it doesn't do anything that you can't do in Photoshop without it. I find, however, that it makes sharpening much easier and I get better results than when I do it myself.
So how do you sharpen?