Board index Equipment Photo Editing Software Sharpening plug-in for photoshop cs2?

Photo Editing Software

Sharpening plug-in for photoshop cs2?

petr_petr
 
Posts: 54

Sharpening plug-in for photoshop cs2?

Post Tue Jan 09, 2007 11:08 pm


Looking for a good sharpening plugin and noise reduct. for photoshop cs2.
Have a trouble Sharpening at photoshop.Prints of blue sky e.t.c. is owersharpened all the time,noise,grain,some dificultee areas are hard to fix,like around fur,hair and blue backround,
Any good choice please?? :wink:
Petr

halesr
 
Posts: 664


Post Wed Jan 10, 2007 3:08 am


You might want to look at PhotoKit Sharpener from PixelGenius.

http://www.pixelgenius.com/sharpener/index.html

Rene

castledude
 
Posts: 869


Post Wed Jan 10, 2007 3:35 am


I use FocalBlade at times with pretty good results....

http://thepluginsite.com/products/photowiz/focalblade/

petr_petr
 
Posts: 54

Pixelgenius

Post Thu Jan 11, 2007 5:16 pm


Pixelgenius look well but 99$ for plugin,
will try them and will see!!!!!
Thanks
PP

dougj
 
Posts: 2276


Post Thu Jan 11, 2007 11:37 pm


Not to confuse the question, there are 2 other noise reduction programs that have plugins for PS. Both of these get very good reviews.

Noise Ninja
http://www.picturecode.com/

Neat Image
http://www.neatimage.com/

I've used the standalone version of Neat Image and have been satisfied with the results. Currently I use a custom PS action (non-commercial), I'll probably switch to one of the above with the next upgrade to CS3.

michlob
 
Posts: 118

Aerial Photo Sharpened with Photoshop Plugin

Post Mon Jan 15, 2007 4:51 am


Image
Above Aerial Photo Sharpened with Fred Miranda's CS Pro Photoshop Plugin (available for Canon and Nikon DSLRs for both Mac and PC).
http://www.fredmiranda.com/software/
michlob

jdepould
 
Posts: 540


Post Mon Jan 15, 2007 5:56 pm


That's way oversharpened, the aliasing is really bad. I just use USM on a duplicated background, set to luminosity blending, with 110%, radius 0.2, and threshold 1, run that until I'm satisfied, then back off the opacity a little bit.
Nikon D300, D200
Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D, 55mm f/1.4 micro, 18-70mm f/3.5-4.5G DX, 80-200 f/2.8D
Apple PowerBook G4, MacBook Pro
Adobe Lightroom, Photoshop CS3

armalite44
 
Posts: 53


Post Fri Jan 19, 2007 2:53 pm


I use Noiseware Pro and love it. They have a free demo but it puts grids over the image. And Unsharp Mask for sharpening. You can create an action with both of these as well.
John

hip
 
Posts: 16


Post Sat Jan 20, 2007 3:13 pm


I really think Photoshop's own smart sharpen plugin, used in advanced mode, is more than fantastic for sharpening images. It provides noise free sharpening along with separate control over shadows and highlights. I really recommend giving it a shot.

halesr
 
Posts: 664


Post Sat Jan 20, 2007 5:54 pm


Follow-up to Noiseware recommendation

From December 2006 Layers Magazine and Scott Kelby's Ten Things You Can't Live Without

He recommends:
Noiseware Professional: This Photoshop plug-in works miracles when it comes to removing noise from a photo. Not only does it remove nearly all visible noise, it does it wtihout overly softening the photo. $69 http://www.imagenomic.com

There is a trial version with gridlines until you purchase and activate.

HTH--Rene

lance_h
 
Posts: 223


Post Tue Jan 23, 2007 4:26 am


i use Fred Miranda's "CSpro" also and am happy with it and would recommend it to anyone. of course, no matter what method you choose, over-sharpening is always a possibility (and always subjective).
i've tried various "trials" of more expensive programs, and Fred's 20 dollar "CSpro" holds it's own and works fine for me. beats USM any day.

petr_petr
 
Posts: 54


Post Fri Jun 29, 2007 11:35 pm


Hi folks,i did bought some NIK sharpening software,i thing is not bad,anyway,thanx to everyone for help!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :wink:
Petr

rongorongo
 
Posts: 5


Post Fri Jul 13, 2007 10:10 am


You know the superior sharpening method utilizes the "hi pass" option on a duped layer on top of the orig. The layer mode is changed from normal to soft light or overlay. Then adjust the layer opacity. Then, obviously combine both and flatten.

Sharpening needs to be adjusted for the type of paper. Glossy paper requires a lot less. Matte watercolor requires more.

Avoid sharpening broad areas that aren't sharply focused i.e. the sky or trees off in the distance.

Scott Kelby has a lot of info on sharpening and so does the Luminous Landscape web page.

petr_petr
 
Posts: 54


Post Mon Jul 16, 2007 11:22 pm


Thanx for tip,will try!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Regards
Petr

andrys
 
Posts: 2701


Post Sat Jul 21, 2007 5:06 am


halesr wrote:Follow-up to Noiseware recommendation

From December 2006 Layers Magazine and Scott Kelby's Ten Things You Can't Live Without

He recommends:
Noiseware Professional: This Photoshop plug-in works miracles when it comes to removing noise from a photo. Not only does it remove nearly all visible noise, it does it wtihout overly softening the photo. $69 http://www.imagenomic.com

There is a trial version with gridlines until you purchase and activate.

HTH--Rene


I tried the big 3 -- Noise Ninja, Neat Image, and Noiseware. There
was no contest (for me) in ease of use and fantastic control, with
Noiseware, without the cost of the oversoftening I got with the others.
I went ahead and bought Noiseware Pro.

I agree that it's best just to sharpen the areas that need it.

Just read that going into LAB mode and sharpening the luminosity layer
will do nicely without affecting the colors. Haven't tried it though.


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