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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3100
Sharpening - in camera vs Light Room
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<blockquote data-quote="Dave_W" data-source="post: 145941" data-attributes="member: 9521"><p>Sharpening a image is really just altering the pixels on the boundary between areas of medium and strong contrast. Increasing the "sharpening" is really just expanding this boundary depth from 1 pixel layer to up to a maximum of 5 (I think it's 5)</p><p>As for in-camera sharpening, if you're taking photos in RAW format, the sharpening only applies to the preview you see when looking at the image in camera. The sharpening does not apply to the RAW data.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dave_W, post: 145941, member: 9521"] Sharpening a image is really just altering the pixels on the boundary between areas of medium and strong contrast. Increasing the "sharpening" is really just expanding this boundary depth from 1 pixel layer to up to a maximum of 5 (I think it's 5) As for in-camera sharpening, if you're taking photos in RAW format, the sharpening only applies to the preview you see when looking at the image in camera. The sharpening does not apply to the RAW data. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3100
Sharpening - in camera vs Light Room
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