Blurrymess
New member
You're welcome, Phil. I'm still working through it myself.
Dang, just typed a lengthly post and lost it... hate that! Anyway...
You hit the Menu button on the D5100, then select "Shooting Menu", hit "Set Picture Control", choose the picture setting you want (i.e. SD Standard...) and right click on the 4 direction arrow selector, and you will see the level adjustments for Sharpening, Contrast, Brightness, Saturation and Hue. Change levels as needed and click the OK button to save.
I've found it useful to shoot a subject on the default setting and then various shots with different levels to get to know what levels are for me. I shoot a subject with a sharp edge, and then a softer edge... to get various angles to judge the right level of sharpness. All in all, I've found the D5100 to be very sharp. I think a bit to tinkering is needed with any camera to get it to the settings that are right for the individual user.
I also set the function button, directly under the flash button, to be my ISO selector. This was one of the best adjustments I made as the camera lacks an ISO button, which I find very useful, but it lacks it no more! LOL
Though my D3100 is good in the sharpness area, I'm going to check and see if I can do the same. Maybe I can get it "tack" sharp.
Thank You!!!
@Blurrymess: I love my D5100 but never came across any sharpness issue before I read this thread. I really liked your comment and feedback. Elsewhere I've said that after having this camera for 9 months I'm still learning. You've added to my knowledge! Many thanks![]()
Dang, just typed a lengthly post and lost it... hate that! Anyway...
You hit the Menu button on the D5100, then select "Shooting Menu", hit "Set Picture Control", choose the picture setting you want (i.e. SD Standard...) and right click on the 4 direction arrow selector, and you will see the level adjustments for Sharpening, Contrast, Brightness, Saturation and Hue. Change levels as needed and click the OK button to save.
I've found it useful to shoot a subject on the default setting and then various shots with different levels to get to know what levels are for me. I shoot a subject with a sharp edge, and then a softer edge... to get various angles to judge the right level of sharpness. All in all, I've found the D5100 to be very sharp. I think a bit to tinkering is needed with any camera to get it to the settings that are right for the individual user.
I also set the function button, directly under the flash button, to be my ISO selector. This was one of the best adjustments I made as the camera lacks an ISO button, which I find very useful, but it lacks it no more! LOL
thank you so much for posting HOW to do this!!
this has been my issue from the beginning as well with the same kit lens. no matter how well exposed or lit a pic is, i always have to sharpen it in ViewNX. don't think it's user error in that i make sure my lenses are clean and have worked hard to learn how exposure works but it hasn't done any good. still need sharpening in every case. have been assuming it's the zoom lens (as they are not as 'true' as a prime lens) but what the OP said about using the same zoom lens between the 2 cameras and the 5100 was still not as sharp as the 40 makes me wonder. there has to be something to it now that at least 3 people have seen this.I don't know if anyone is still watching this thread, but I would like to chime in. I too purchased a D5100 to replace a D40 and have found that the 200 or so pics I have taken do not seem to be terribly sharp. I am using the kit 18-55 VR lens. I just looked at some 130 pictures I took last year in Italy and they seem remarkably sharp. I have made the assumption that the D5100 shots are not sharp as a result of user error and I am working hard to figure out if indeed the problem is me. I must say that if I had to do it again, I would have kept the D40. The D5100 is clearly capable of many more things than the D40 but many of these capabilities such as video and live view are not at all important to me. I was hoping for razor sharp pictures and have been very disappointed. Any suggestions?
Thank you,
DG
That only changes the sharpness if you are shooting in JPEG. You also need to be shooting in Fine if you are shooting JPEG.
If you are shooting in RAW then none of this matters. In RAW you control all of this in Post Processing
While I have not confirmed this myself, I believe some of the Nikon applications (e.g. ViewNX, CaptureNX) do interpret certain aspects of the camera settings profile even when displaying RAW files; so if Blurrymess is using one of those applications, that might explain the difference.Blurrymess in Post 19 says the exact opposite. He wrote that two RAW files of a similar shot were very different after changing the picture sharpness settings. Now I get to go home and do some new experiments to find out. Maybe the picture settings just change the initial appearance of the RAW files, but the information contained in the files is the same?
this solved my problem too. funny thing is i have been aware of the 'subsettings' for Picture Control for a while but couldn't figure out how to change them. gets confusing though - if using an auto mode like Macro or Landscape, those modes will use their own default subsettings for PC regardless of what you set them to in the menu. yours only take affect when in M, A, S, or P mode.Dang, just typed a lengthly post and lost it... hate that! Anyway...
You hit the Menu button on the D5100, then select "Shooting Menu", hit "Set Picture Control", choose the picture setting you want (i.e. SD Standard...) and right click on the 4 direction arrow selector, and you will see the level adjustments for Sharpening, Contrast, Brightness, Saturation and Hue. Change levels as needed and click the OK button to save.
I've found it useful to shoot a subject on the default setting and then various shots with different levels to get to know what levels are for me. I shoot a subject with a sharp edge, and then a softer edge... to get various angles to judge the right level of sharpness. All in all, I've found the D5100 to be very sharp. I think a bit to tinkering is needed with any camera to get it to the settings that are right for the individual user.
I also set the function button, directly under the flash button, to be my ISO selector. This was one of the best adjustments I made as the camera lacks an ISO button, which I find very useful, but it lacks it no more! LOL
I have mainly been seeing this in taking pictures of people. sometimes their faces are real sharp, beautiful. and others, they are slightly blurry. settings are always similar. I also wondered if it was my lens. I increased my default sharpness to 6, I believe, but don't know if I see much of a difference. it looks more 'digital' when I increase the sharpening, not the "crisp" sharpness with my d60. You mentioned the applications might make a difference? Can you please elaborate on that? I am using ViewNX2 that I received with my camera when I got it. I don't know if this will make sense, but when I open a picture, it looks real sharp, then it adjusts slightly and looks out of focus. It's like the program is adding softening. In the past, it was always the opposite--pictures were blurry until the program adjusted, then were sharp. I noticed this most on a recent photo I took at a wedding. I could see the eyes real clear when it first pulled up, but when it adjusted, I couldn't make out the iris/pupil. I don't know if this is making any sense... But, if it somehow IS the program, is there a fix around it?While I have not confirmed this myself, I believe some of the Nikon applications (e.g. ViewNX, CaptureNX) do interpret certain aspects of the camera settings profile even when displaying RAW files; so if Blurrymess is using one of those applications, that might explain the difference.
In thinking about it, and considering that my upgrade path also went from D40 to D5100 to my current D7100, the D40 did turn out sharper photo's, at least at the outset. Once I tweaked my D5100 I was very happy with the output. But both camera's most definitely needed tweaking in the menus to achieve full potential. As I recall, the default "Sharpness" setting on all my Nikon cameras has been quite low; definitely in negative numbers. Whether changing those settings helps when shooting RAW or not I guess is debatable, but it certainly isn't *hurting* anything in my experience.
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