Some good on-line resources are
Computer-Darkroom <http://www.rgbnet.co.uk/ilyons/>
a few scanning tips <http://www.scantips.com/>
Making fine prints in your digital darkroom
<http://www.normankoren.com/makingfineprints.html>
Mastering Downsampling
<http://www.controlledvocabulary.com/imagedatabases/downsampling.html> This
site is great for explaining what you are doing and why you are doing
it, not only for downsampling, but for unsharp mask. I found the very
detailed procedures are not optimal for all kinds of images. Try them as
a tutorial, experiment, and discover what's best for you. In Photoshop 6
or 7, with that lovely, one click, multi-level undo/redo, it's easy to
compare before and after of one or several steps adjustment steps.
I always scan for and save the best straight scan I can. Later, I make
adjustments to curves, balance, sharpening, etc. in photoshop and also
save the final print and/or web versions.
Moose
IanG wrote:
OM content.... I use one :-)
Last night I started reading a magazine to discover that I don't know how to
use curves and unsharp properly. I've discovered how to set black and white
points with curves and the difference to a few of my pix is startling.
Now I strongly suspect I've been using unsharp mask badly, which could go a
long way to explain lots of 'grain' in my prints. Does anybody have a simple
approach / guide to using unsharp?
I have a horrid susption that I'm going to need to rescan and correct a lot
of negs now :-(
< This message was delivered via the Olympus Mailing List >
< For questions, mailto:owner-olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >
< Web Page: http://Zuiko.sls.bc.ca/swright/olympuslist.html >
|