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Photography Q&A
High pass sharpening
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<blockquote data-quote="J-see" data-source="post: 366502" data-attributes="member: 31330"><p>I'd have taken the layer opacity some % down but that's taste. I'm always using the high-pass hattrick these days but the problem is usually not the sharpening itself but the oversharpening. </p><p></p><p>It's very easy to use too much. What I do is bring the opacity down while switching the layer on and off until I have a hard time seeing the actual difference. Then I up the % a couple. I do that for all three layers.</p><p></p><p>What you also have to pay attention to is to erase undesired auras. Especially the outlines in high contrast areas can suffer those artifacts (the tail of the second as an example displays a fine "glow"). I simply use the eraser and remove those parts in the high pass layers before merging all.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J-see, post: 366502, member: 31330"] I'd have taken the layer opacity some % down but that's taste. I'm always using the high-pass hattrick these days but the problem is usually not the sharpening itself but the oversharpening. It's very easy to use too much. What I do is bring the opacity down while switching the layer on and off until I have a hard time seeing the actual difference. Then I up the % a couple. I do that for all three layers. What you also have to pay attention to is to erase undesired auras. Especially the outlines in high contrast areas can suffer those artifacts (the tail of the second as an example displays a fine "glow"). I simply use the eraser and remove those parts in the high pass layers before merging all. [/QUOTE]
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High pass sharpening
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