I normally do masked sharpening layers for portraits (sharpen the eyes,
eyebrows, lips, etc. separately from the rest of the image (which may,
in fact, be slightly blurred instead). But I can't recall any specifics
of masked sharpening on other than people.
Chuck Norcutt
On 4/4/2012 7:57 AM, Bob Whitmire wrote:
> The Pixel Genius plug-in puts sharpening on its own layer--in some
> cases layers--and even adds a layer mask so you can adjust according
> to taste. I really like it. Several photos have benefitted from
> masked sharpening. In fact, I'm starting to mask a lot of the
> sharpening I do.
>
> --Bob
>
>
> On Apr 3, 2012, at 6:51 PM, Chuck Norcutt wrote:
>
>> I think I can do output sharpening fairly well but in PhotoShop
>> it's a destructive process. The other stuff, maybe.
>>
>> Chuck Norcutt
>>
>>
>> On 4/3/2012 6:25 PM, Bob Whitmire wrote:
>>> You don't. Lightroom prints it. If you're sending to a lab such
>>> as Miller's, you either let them do the output sharpening, or you
>>> do it yourself. It's really not all that big a deal. Output
>>> sharpening is very tame compared with situational or creative
>>> sharpening. I use a Pixel Genius plug-in that has output
>>> sharpening among its features. Also designed by Jeff Shewe and
>>> Bruce Fraser.
>>
>
--
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