Sharpening in ACR
Author
Discussion

DibblyDobbler

Original Poster:

11,443 posts

221 months

Friday 8th January 2016
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Good evening Gents - some help needed please smile

When sharpening a RAW file in ACR - are there any rough guidelines as to how much you generally apply?

For my macro work I usually go for:

Amount = 50
Radius = 1.5
Detail = ?? (dunno just ignore this one usually paperbag)

But I'm never really very sure if this is enough (let's just assume the shot is correctly exposed etc so not much noise to worry about)

TIA for any replies smile

Simpo Two

91,491 posts

289 months

Friday 8th January 2016
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You're supposed to look at the photo and see smash

Note that different image sizes will need different amounts of sharpening.

DibblyDobbler

Original Poster:

11,443 posts

221 months

Friday 8th January 2016
quotequote all
oh - so it's a 'suck it and see' approach? No rule of thumb?

Simpo Two

91,491 posts

289 months

Friday 8th January 2016
quotequote all
Well, I use 'SIAS' - because that's how H. sapiens looks at photos - with his eyes. As long as my eyes are better than the person I'm trying to impress, all is well smile

DibblyDobbler

Original Poster:

11,443 posts

221 months

Friday 8th January 2016
quotequote all
Fair enough, thanks smile

Craikeybaby

11,830 posts

249 months

Monday 11th January 2016
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Isn't sharpening best left until you have resized the file for output?

DavidY

4,492 posts

308 months

Monday 11th January 2016
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thebraketester

15,553 posts

162 months

Monday 11th January 2016
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Craikeybaby said:
Isn't sharpening best left until you have resized the file for output?
Was just going to say this exactly.

DibblyDobbler

Original Poster:

11,443 posts

221 months

Monday 11th January 2016
quotequote all
Craikeybaby said:
Isn't sharpening best left until you have resized the file for output?
Honestly I have no idea - I don't even 'resize for output'!

I usually work on the RAW file in ACR (do some sharpening etc there), massacre it in photoshop, save it as max jpeg then upload to Flickr. smile

DibblyDobbler

Original Poster:

11,443 posts

221 months

Monday 11th January 2016
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DavidY said:
Oh that looks interesting! Thanks David - will have a proper read later smile

thebraketester

15,553 posts

162 months

Monday 11th January 2016
quotequote all
If you are uploading to flickr, then I would reduce the files down to 1024 on the long side and sharpen. No point in uploading max res files (unless you specifically need to)

RobDickinson

31,343 posts

278 months

Monday 11th January 2016
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Craikeybaby said:
Isn't sharpening best left until you have resized the file for output?
Often people do it twice.

There is 'input sharpening' you apply to the raw file as you convert. This gets you a minimum amount of sharpening to bring out some detail at the full file size.

Then there is 'output sharpening' which depends on where it is going (print/web) and finished size.

Theres many other variables too, fine detail needs different sharpening than coarse, sometimes you can end up using different amounts for different areas of the image.

Simpo Two

91,491 posts

289 months

Monday 11th January 2016
quotequote all
thebraketester said:
If you are uploading to flickr, then I would reduce the files down to 1024 on the long side and sharpen. No point in uploading max res files (unless you specifically need to)
Indeed, no point uploading 10Mb when 400Kb will look just as good and possibly avoid any auto resizing/compression that can wreck an image.

RobDickinson

31,343 posts

278 months

Monday 11th January 2016
quotequote all
Some people do use flickr as a full sized image store and you can restrict access to those so no one else can get them.

I often dont do any output sharpening for online, just use a bicubic sharper downsampling in photoshop to 1200px wide/high this tends to add enough, if not I use smart sharpen