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Sharpen projects professional review
Sharpen projects professional review






sharpen projects professional review

I'm also a FocusMagic user, and will probably continue to use it for the foreseeable future, but FocusMagic is limited to dealing with (the most common kind of) more predictable kinds of blur. It will automatically find the proper PSF to resharpen the output after resizing.One can then add some structure to enhance that result and compensate for media losses like those caused by ink diffusion. "Sharpen PP" is also useful for output sharpening with deconvolution. The complication of that is that if resizing is part of the Photoshop editing, a re-sharpening will be required by exporting to "Sharpen PP". So the plugin is more often going to be used as the final step before producing output.Īn alternative workflow is to start editing the unsharpened TIFF output of a Raw converter in Sharpen Projects Professional, and then finish by sending the result to Photoshop for final work. I find that to be a drawback for my workflow, although I understand the technical (multiscale) reasons behind it. The Photoshop Plugin is an Export Automation plugin, which is less convenient than a plugin filter that can be applied to a layer. It also offers more control over the process than e.g. The first impression is that it does quite a good job (within the range of possibilities) of correcting motion/vibration blur, and the deconvolution quality does not produce too many artifacts, if any. I had it on my list to evaluate, so I just spent a bit of time on testing it.








Sharpen projects professional review