With regards to your Rule of 100, is this specific to landscape images for the most part or all types images where you've used a smaller aperture (maybe a group photo? architecture?) and there are more details present (and increase masking as you said so that softer areas like the sky aren't affected)? I tend to shoot with larger apertures and also use Lensbaby lenses that are known for a blurred result - so my common sense is telling me I might not need to use any sharpening in those types of pictures? I learned a lot from this video as Sharpening is not something I have used in the 4 years I've been editing except upon export where I had it set on "low sharpening" which seems to be a mistake?
Hello Mr. Jacob. I have reviewed this training video about sharpening two times. It is one of the best training videos I have ever encountered online. I will visit your home page to explore what you have to offer to an enthusiast photographer. Perhaps something like a Master Video for Luminar Neo. I enjoy your explanation style very much. You have a way to explain, which is enjoyable to listen to and learn. Congratulations.
If you are a Fujifilm shooter and you are particular about denoise and sharpening, Luminar Neo is definitely not your choice. Look else where like the Topaz or the DXO products, those work MUCH MUCH better than Luminar Neo in those 2 areas. This is from my personal experience.
Best video I have ever seen on sharpening in Luminar Neo. Invaluable for editing / sharpening digital photo images. Thank You
Thanks a lot! I finally found basic explanations of the sliderfunctions. It is much easier now to chose which one to use or not.
Thank you, Andrew.
With regards to your Rule of 100, is this specific to landscape images for the most part or all types images where you've used a smaller aperture (maybe a group photo? architecture?) and there are more details present (and increase masking as you said so that softer areas like the sky aren't affected)? I tend to shoot with larger apertures and also use Lensbaby lenses that are known for a blurred result - so my common sense is telling me I might not need to use any sharpening in those types of pictures? I learned a lot from this video as Sharpening is not something I have used in the 4 years I've been editing except upon export where I had it set on "low sharpening" which seems to be a mistake?
Great video, Thanks so much, as I have always struggled with the controls of sharpening in Luminar Neo.👍 You have managed to make it clearer😀
I hope it was helpful... it is a tricky subject, but once you understand what the sharpening does to the image, everything else is clearer.
Hello Mr. Jacob. I have reviewed this training video about sharpening two times. It is one of the best training videos I have ever encountered online. I will visit your home page to explore what you have to offer to an enthusiast photographer. Perhaps something like a Master Video for Luminar Neo. I enjoy your explanation style very much. You have a way to explain, which is enjoyable to listen to and learn. Congratulations.
Awesome, thank you!
Hi Jakub, thank you for your deep explanation.
I tried... I had a many questions about it in past, so hopefully this will answer few of them.
Excellent tutorial. Thanks a lot!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Excellent walkthrough!
Thank you very much...
Thank you for your videos on the basic/essential tools within Lumina Neo. Have you done one on Contrast?
Hi, thank you for the comment. I am afraid I haven't done tutorial on contrast yet. Maybe in the future.
Muchas gracias.
You are welcome 🙏
If you are a Fujifilm shooter and you are particular about denoise and sharpening, Luminar Neo is definitely not your choice. Look else where like the Topaz or the DXO products, those work MUCH MUCH better than Luminar Neo in those 2 areas. This is from my personal experience.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts 🙏