shocky New Member Jun 30, 2003 1,249 0 0 Rental @ 82237153 rentcamera.blogspot.com Jul 14, 2005 #1 hi guys, would like to hear ur workflow on how best to retify. thanks
T TMC Senior Member Sep 4, 2004 6,320 0 0 Beyond Space-Time Continuum Jul 14, 2005 #2 depending on how much shaking....but best is to just junk the pics. A little blurring can be rectified with USM and resizing it smaller.
depending on how much shaking....but best is to just junk the pics. A little blurring can be rectified with USM and resizing it smaller.
shocky New Member Jun 30, 2003 1,249 0 0 Rental @ 82237153 rentcamera.blogspot.com Jul 14, 2005 #3 USM? i was wondering how much can post processing revive it since the casio s500 relies on not the lens but rather the processing to "anti-shake"
USM? i was wondering how much can post processing revive it since the casio s500 relies on not the lens but rather the processing to "anti-shake"
A Adzz Senior Member Jun 20, 2004 1,074 2 38 West area Jul 17, 2005 #4 shocky said: USM? i was wondering how much can post processing revive it since the casio s500 relies on not the lens but rather the processing to "anti-shake" Click to expand... I think he referring to unsharp sharpening,
shocky said: USM? i was wondering how much can post processing revive it since the casio s500 relies on not the lens but rather the processing to "anti-shake" Click to expand... I think he referring to unsharp sharpening,
K ken111111 New Member May 24, 2004 465 0 0 Jurong Jul 17, 2005 #5 shocky said: hi guys, would like to hear ur workflow on how best to retify. thanks Click to expand... Use Focus Magic 3.0, after that resize smaller, then use unsharp mask
shocky said: hi guys, would like to hear ur workflow on how best to retify. thanks Click to expand... Use Focus Magic 3.0, after that resize smaller, then use unsharp mask
N n0d3 Senior Member Feb 3, 2003 1,513 0 36 Jul 18, 2005 #6 shocky said: USM? i was wondering how much can post processing revive it since the casio s500 relies on not the lens but rather the processing to "anti-shake" Click to expand... USM = Unsharp Mask I'm not sure how Casio's "Digital Signal Processor" works but it probably has to do with the sensor analyzing the scene and capturing it continiously. I don't see how its possible to revive a blurred photo just from the photo alone.
shocky said: USM? i was wondering how much can post processing revive it since the casio s500 relies on not the lens but rather the processing to "anti-shake" Click to expand... USM = Unsharp Mask I'm not sure how Casio's "Digital Signal Processor" works but it probably has to do with the sensor analyzing the scene and capturing it continiously. I don't see how its possible to revive a blurred photo just from the photo alone.
A AReality Senior Member Jun 9, 2003 4,471 0 36 visualjournalist.net Jul 18, 2005 #7 Depending on the amount of blur, it is actually possible to salvage. But it's not for the mathematically challenged though...
Depending on the amount of blur, it is actually possible to salvage. But it's not for the mathematically challenged though...