| Sharpening | •Every image needs sharpening. The name “Unsharp Mask” comes from an old-school analog technique where you created a duplicate negative that was slightly out of focus (unsharp) and then sandwiched it together (mask) with your original negative to make your print. The magical result was increased contrast around edges, creating the illusion of greater visual sharpness. |
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Objective: •To explore the many sharpening techniques and to see firsthand what technique works best with different types of images •To analyze and draw conclusions from the examples created |
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Overview: •Choose ONE image to sharpening •The image should be color corrected and cleaned up before sharpening •Save As, flatten the file, size the file •For each sharpening technique create a duplicate file of that one image and apply the technique •Save files as a .psd, include layers if technique does not require flattening. |
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TitleFile: Bold.psd (ex: original.psd, lum.psd) 1) Original image not sharpened (you do not need a duplicate layer for this file) 2) Unsharp mask 3) Lab Sharpening 4) Luminosity sharpening 5) Layer sharpening 6) High Pass Sharpening 7) Portion sharpening (one area of the image sharpened) |
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•Turn in a typed page discussing your conclusions of the technique that worked best on your image and why. |
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| File specs: •2160 pixels, longest side •240ppi •Adobe RGB 1998 •8 bit fil-.psd •Include all layers do not flatten, unless specified in the technique |
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| The unsharp mask creates a light/dark halo -Amount - is the intensity of the halo; The pixels being pushed to extremes of white and black. -Radius - is the width of the halo, wider the halo the more obvious the effect. -Threshold - acts as a damper holding back noise or grain from being exaggerated |
An Exercise before sharpening a real Image: •Open Photoshop and create two adjacent gray blocks
Amount: determines the aggressiveness of the "sharpening" action. With your simple two-gray image, try amounts of 100, 200, and 400 (make sure the Preview box is checked in the Unsharp Mask dialog so that you see the changes as you make them; you should also be viewing at Actual Pixels size). What you should see is that as the amount is increased, the colors of the new edges get more exaggerated. In other words, the light line that gets added on one side of the boundary gets lighter with each increase, the dark line on the other gets darker (though that’s often more difficult to see). |
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•Sharpening is the last step before printing.
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| The Sharpening starts here: Always Duplicate your background layer. If you over-sharpen you can reduce the opacity of your sharpen layer. 1) Bring your image to 100% magnification on screen (Double click the zoom tool) use the move tool (hand) to scroll around to an area you can see the sharpening effect. 2) Filter - Sharpen - Unsharp Mask With your image at 100% magnification experiment with the numbers and see the effects. All Images will have different settings. For my images I usually use an Amount setting between 50-100, the Radius 1-4 and the Threshold 0-3. Some people push this up to 5. You will find that different types of images have different sharpening parameters. I have seen others who swear by a totally different approach. Whatever works... this is our starting point. |
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| Lab Sharpening 1) Open RGB file 2) Image - Duplicate 3) Click OK 4) Image - Mode - Lab Color 5) Channels palette - click the lightness channel It will then be highlighted 6) Filter - sharpen - Unsharp Mask filter At this point you will only be sharpening the black and white lightness channel avoiding the problem color halos that pop up in the RGB sharpening approach. 7) Image - Mode - RGB Color |
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| Luminosity Sharpening 1) Open RGB file 2) Image - Duplicate 3) Click OK 4) Filter - sharpen - Unsharp Mask filter 5) Edit - Fade Unsharp Mask 6) In the dialogue box change MODE to Luminosity 7) Click OK The sharpening is now only applied to the luminosity not to the color data |
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| Layer Sharpening This avoids noise and color shifts 1) Open RGB file 2) Image - Duplicate 3) Click OK 4) Duplicate background layer (Command - J) 5) Change the blend mode of the duplicated layer to Luminosity 6) Filter - Sharpen - Unsharp Mask Filter 7) Duplicate the sharpened luminosity layer (Command - J) 8) Filter - Blur - Gaussian Blur -enter a pixel setting of “3” -click OK The blur takes care of exaggerated noise and halos from sharpening 9) Change the mode from Luminosity to Color, this gets rid of the blur 10) for this exercise leave layers, when printing flatten the file |
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High Pass Sharpening -Some believe you should move the radius slider to the first point you see color information, try this, experiment. |
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| Applying sharpening to a portion of the image 1) open an image 2) make a duplicate layer of the background 3) sharpen the background copy 3) Click the layer mask icon 4) depending on what you want to sharpen? (less of the image you can command “I” to hide the sharpened layer and paint with white in the area you want sharpened) or do not inverse and paint away with black where you do not want sharpening |
•When painting on a layer mask remember •Black conceals •White reveals |
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Kelby generic Unsharp Mask #’s
I have these set up as actions to quickly sharpen for the internet, etc. |
I like to set the radius to be about 1/2 visually from the amount and threshold
More Scott Kelby suggested #'s using Unsharp Mask (USM) in Photoshop.
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