5 Tips for Sharper Photos in GIMP

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  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
  • In this GIMP tutorial, I provide 5 tips for sharper photos. I provide in-camera tips for producing a sharper photo BEFORE you import the photos onto your computer and into GIMP. I also show you the best technique when using a sharpening filter inside of this free photo editor to reduce color noise, chromatic aberrations, or other imperfections when sharpening.
    This is a great tutorial for beginner photographers and beginner GIMP users. I also show you how to make adjustments to your image (though I have other tutorials better suited for that if you want to get into the details) and also provide the best way to export your image for a sharper final result.
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    Download the Photo Used in This Tutorial:
    flic.kr/p/2iuw3g2
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    #Sharpen #ImageSharpening #SharperPhotos

Комментарии • 46

  • @marcoinvesting5339
    @marcoinvesting5339 4 года назад +18

    I particularly agree with your choice of pictures

    • @icebearreal
      @icebearreal 2 года назад +2

      Hahahahahaha, nice sense of humour.

  • @southernexposure123
    @southernexposure123 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for the video and for explaining about radius and what that adjustment affects.

  • @vickilyn
    @vickilyn 4 года назад +3

    Thank you!! I have always just taken my final image and then used the Sharpen (Unsharp Mask) filter. Unfortunately, as you mentioned, this often affects the edges so on some images I still have to play around with the colors before I am satisfied with it. I often wondered how to use the Decompose option and I plan on using that method more often.

  • @rolliegarcia3713
    @rolliegarcia3713 2 года назад +3

    I'm here for GIMP tricks, promise

  • @angelluismillan
    @angelluismillan 3 года назад +1

    Very clear. I use the well known method with a layer copied in luminance mode, but these ones are better. I prefer the second method: the first slightly increases brightness, not the second.

  • @JackOgden
    @JackOgden 2 года назад

    Hi - going the Decompose - Lab route is great - Thanks. I am not sure it was available in pre-2.10 GIMP, but now at least you can shorten the process by copying the image to a new layer then choosing Components > Extract Component> LAB L which gives you the grey-scale LAB layer without having to decompose and copy and paste back the lab component. BTW I find this combined with the G/MIC > Details > Gradient gives me the best sharpening for my purposes. Thanks for all your excellent Tutorials!

  • @Windsorsillest
    @Windsorsillest Год назад

    As always another great video appreciate you so much. Gimp was absolutely alien to me until I found your videos!!!

  • @markgholson9222
    @markgholson9222 2 месяца назад

    I use floating dialog boxes. I put a smaller LAB box down below, then I have the bigger Original box above. So when I recompose with LAB I can instantly see the results on the original image.

  • @SJQuirke
    @SJQuirke 2 года назад

    this was indeed useful - thank you

  • @jeganj
    @jeganj 2 года назад

    Thank you so much Davies media design for best impact

  • @cosmo0080
    @cosmo0080 4 года назад +1

    i could see the 2nd method had better results thank you

  • @Twobarpsi
    @Twobarpsi Год назад

    Great tutorial!

  • @RU-qv3jl
    @RU-qv3jl 8 месяцев назад

    Good video. I personally don’t like the global sharpening effect of the USM filter. I prefer to work on various levels of detail. As such I still decompose the image but then I use wavelet decompose on the luminosity layer. I do all my work on the decomposed luminosity layers until I am happy and then copy visible and paste over the luminosity layer. Then I recompose and the original image takes on the sharpness that I wanted. I have found that in that manner I get more control and also fewer unwanted artefacts.

  • @ChessGrandmaster
    @ChessGrandmaster 3 года назад

    Just brilliant

  • @sytitan
    @sytitan 4 года назад

    Thanks

  • @tajongsylvanus2440
    @tajongsylvanus2440 4 года назад

    Please do a tutorial on heal tool and fuzzy tool as well🙏

  • @retror.d.1630
    @retror.d.1630 4 года назад +1

    Lol I’ll be the first to comment on those two nice 🤗

  • @AstroDork
    @AstroDork Год назад

    Great tutorial. In fact I'm working my way through all your GIMP tutorials among others. Who's the young lady... she has a name?

  • @MarcEspie
    @MarcEspie 3 года назад +2

    For the sharpen tip, how about this:
    do the LCh Luminance filter for the real time preview.
    Then delete it, do ctrl-f on the decomposed image and recompose ?
    I expect the parameters are pretty much going to be what you want, and that way you avoid skewing the colors.

  • @gerobokdapur8165
    @gerobokdapur8165 4 года назад

    👍👍

  • @gv9359
    @gv9359 10 месяцев назад +1

    Dude. . . that image though

  • @suggestssoyam1914
    @suggestssoyam1914 3 года назад +4

    I CAME TO LEARN GIMP EDITING BUT HIS IMAGES KEEPS ME DISTRACTING. SO BEAUTIFUL GIRLS. JUST WOW GIRLS .. I MEAN EDITING

  • @laoschild86
    @laoschild86 4 года назад

    Would it lose quality if saved as png format?

    • @minepro1206
      @minepro1206 4 года назад

      No, but it's better to use tiff for anything except transparent graphics.

  • @sprinkles_091
    @sprinkles_091 2 года назад

    my images keep looking really pixelated when i try to bring the into gimp, especially when i try to put the print onto something really small. how to i keep my image quality, but still have an image that is only 100x100 but i need it to look HD. i make decor for the sims 4 and am trying to put a print on a coffee cup. lol

  • @sparkytheguy1220
    @sparkytheguy1220 3 года назад +1

    omg you are so handsome with the beard and your haircut! don't change your look. :)

  • @Jr8uup
    @Jr8uup 2 года назад +1

    Aren't you worried that hot chick will find out about taking photos of her with the telephoto lens and sharpening them up for "educational" purposes?
    JK thanks for your help.

  • @bigii
    @bigii 2 года назад

    Check The volume of your video bro

  • @PaigeWhite
    @PaigeWhite 4 года назад +1

    Why don't you do livestreams anymore?

    • @DaviesMediaDesign
      @DaviesMediaDesign  4 года назад

      Unfortunately they weren't performing as well as I would have liked them to.

    • @PaigeWhite
      @PaigeWhite 4 года назад +1

      @@DaviesMediaDesign Well that's too bad because I enjoyed them. 😥

    • @DaviesMediaDesign
      @DaviesMediaDesign  4 года назад +2

      I enjoyed doing them - but sometimes the numbers just don’t work out :/

  • @kaleightucker5479
    @kaleightucker5479 4 года назад

    What is your advice on exporting an image to upload to Facebook?

    • @DaviesMediaDesign
      @DaviesMediaDesign  4 года назад +2

      Facebook is going to end up compressing the image to whatever size it wants the image to be, and it has size limitations, so you'll want to export to JPEG.

    • @kaleightucker5479
      @kaleightucker5479 4 года назад

      @@DaviesMediaDesign, ok. Thank you.

  • @coldstuff9784
    @coldstuff9784 2 года назад +1

    lol you just had to use an image like that didn't you?

  • @marcus3d
    @marcus3d 4 года назад

    Nonono, do all the edits EXCEPT sharpening before downscaling it, but ALWAYS sharpen last. That's because the resize will introduce softness due to interpolation.

    • @DaviesMediaDesign
      @DaviesMediaDesign  4 года назад +3

      I understand the logic, but I simply disagree that you should wait to sharpen till after you scale. You are going to lose pixels regardless when you scale because of interpolation, but I think the sharpening looks better when it's performed on the original image versus the scaled image. Plus, you can save your original image with the sharpening, and come back to it any time and scale it down for any project or medium. I have run the tests and this is what I prefer. You can still get good results sharpening the scaled image, though. Simply turn down the radius before cranking up the amount.

    • @marcus3d
      @marcus3d 4 года назад

      @@DaviesMediaDesign I did some more tests now, too, and found that the best results seem to be when sharpening both before AND after the resize.
      Do a slightly-less-than-normal sharpening before the resize, and then do another slightly-less-than-normal sharpening after it (with radius

  • @johngilbert3405
    @johngilbert3405 7 месяцев назад

    YOU TALK TO MUCH