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Adjusting image sharpness and blur, Sharpen recommendations, Digital camera or scanner you use. see – Adobe Photoshop CS4 User Manual

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USING PHOTOSHOP CS4

Retouching and transforming

Last updated 1/10/2010

Luminance noise may be more pronounced in one channel of the image, usually the blue channel. You can adjust the
noise for each channel separately in Advanced mode. Before opening the filter, examine each channel in your image
separately to see if noise is prevalent in one channel. You preserve more image detail by correcting one channel rather
than making an overall correction to all channels.

1

Choose Filter

> Noise > Reduce Noise.

2

Zoom in on the preview image to get a better view of image noise.

3

Set options:

Strength

Controls the amount of luminance noise reduction applied to all image channels.

Preserve Details

Preserves edges and image details such as hair or texture objects. A value of 100 preserves the most

image detail, but reduces luminance noise the least. Balance the Strength and Preserve Details controls to fine-tune
noise reduction.

Reduce Color Noise

Removes random color pixels. A higher value reduces more color noise.

Sharpen Details

Sharpens the image. Removing noise reduces image sharpness. Use the sharpening control in the

dialog box or use one of the other Photoshop sharpening filters later to restore sharpness.

Remove JPEG Artifacts

Removes blocky image artifacts and halos caused by saving a image using a low JPEG quality

setting.

4

If luminance noise is more prevalent in one or two color channels, click the Advanced button and then choose the
color channel from the Channel menu. Use the Strength and Preserve Details controls to reduce noise in that
channel.

Adjusting image sharpness and blur

Sharpen recommendations

Sharpening enhances the definition of edges in an image. Whether your images come from a digital camera or a
scanner, most images can benefit from sharpening. The degree of sharpening needed varies depending on the quality
of the digital camera or scanner. Keep in mind that sharpening cannot correct a severely blurred image.

Notes and tips about sharpening:

Sharpen your image on a separate layer so that you can resharpen it later if you need to output it to a different
medium.

If you sharpen your image on a separate layer, set the layer’s blending mode to Luminosity to avoid color shifts
along edges.

Sharpening increases image contrast. If you find that highlights or shadows are clipped after you sharpen, use the
layer blending controls (if you sharpen a separate layer) to prevent sharpening in highlights and shadows. See

Specify a tonal range for blending layers

” on page 302.

If you need to reduce image noise, do so before sharpening so that you don’t intensify the noise.

Sharpen your image multiple times in small amounts. Sharpen the first time to correct blur caused by capturing
your image (scanning it or taking it with your digital camera). After you’ve color corrected and sized your image,
sharpen it again (or a copy of it) to add the appropriate amount of sharpening for your output medium.

If possible, judge your sharpening by outputting it to the final medium. The amount of sharpening needed varies
among output media.