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Sharpen photos

  1. Guía del usuario de Photoshop Elements
  2. Introducción a Photoshop Elements
    1. Novedades de Photoshop Elements
    2. Requisitos del sistema | Photoshop Elements
    3. Conceptos básicos del espacio de trabajo
    4. Modo Guiada
    5. Realización de proyectos fotográficos
  3. Entorno y espacio de trabajo
    1. Familiarícese con la pantalla de inicio
    2. Conceptos básicos del espacio de trabajo
    3. Preferencias
    4. Herramientas
    5. Paneles y cestas
    6. Apertura de archivos
    7. Reglas, cuadrículas y guías
    8. Modo rápido mejorado
    9. Información de archivo
    10. Ajustes preestablecidos y bibliotecas
    11. Compatibilidad con toque múltiple
    12. Discos de memoria virtual, plugins y actualizaciones de la aplicación
    13. Acciones de deshacer, rehacer y cancelar
    14. Visualización de imágenes
  4. Corrección y mejora de fotografías
    1. Redimensionar imágenes
    2. Recorte de fotografías
    3. Procesamiento de archivos de imagen RAW de cámara
    4. Adición de desenfoque, sustitución de colores y clonación de áreas de imagen
    5. Ajuste de sombras y luz
    6. Retoque y corrección de fotografías
    7. Enfocar fotografías
    8. Transformación
    9. Tono inteligente automático
    10. Recomposición
    11. Uso de acciones para procesar fotografías
    12. Composición de Photomerge
    13. Creación de imágenes panorámicas
    14. Superposiciones en movimiento
    15. Elementos en movimiento
  5. Adición de formas y texto
    1. Adición de texto
    2. Edición de texto
    3. Creación de formas
    4. Edición de formas
    5. Introducción a la pintura
    6. Herramientas de pintura
    7. Configurar pinceles
    8. Motivos
    9. Rellenos y trazos
    10. Degradados
    11. Trabajo con texto asiático
  6. Acciones rápidas
  7. Filtros, efectos y ediciones guiadas
    1. Modo Guiada
    2. Filtros
    3. Modo de edición Guiada: ediciones de Photomerge
    4. Modo guiado: ediciones básicas
    5. Filtros de ajuste
    6. Efectos
    7. Ediciones divertidas del modo de edición Guiada
    8. Ediciones especiales del modo de edición Guiada
    9. Filtros artísticos
    10. Modo de edición Guiada: modificaciones del color
    11. Modo guiado: ediciones de blanco y negro
    12. Filtros de desenfoque
    13. Filtros de trazos de pincel
    14. Filtros de distorsión
    15. Otros filtros
    16. Filtros de ruido
    17. Filtros para interpretar
    18. Filtros para bosquejar
    19. Filtros para estilizar
    20. Filtros de textura
    21. Filtros para pixelizar
  8. Trabajo con colores
    1. Conceptos del color
    2. Configurar la gestión de color
    3. Fundamentos de la corrección de tonos y colores
    4. Selección de colores
    5. Ajuste del color, la saturación y el tono
    6. Corrección de tintes de color
    7. Uso de modos de imagen y tablas de colores
    8. Color y Camera Raw
  9. Trabajo con selecciones
    1. Realizar selecciones en Photoshop Elements
    2. Almacenamiento de selecciones
    3. Modificación de selecciones
    4. Desplazamiento y copia de selecciones
    5. Edite y perfeccione selecciones
    6. Bordes de selección suaves con suavizado y calado
  10. Trabajo con capas
    1. Creación de capas
    2. Edición de capas
    3. Copia y organización de capas
    4. Capas de ajuste y de relleno
    5. Máscaras de recorte
    6. Máscaras de capas
    7. Estilos de capa
    8. Opacidad y modos de fusión
  11. Creación de proyectos fotográficos
    1. Aspectos básicos del proyecto
    2. Realización de proyectos fotográficos
    3. Edición de proyectos fotográficos
    4. Creación de reels de fotos
  12. Almacenamiento, impresión y uso compartido de fotografías
    1. Guardado de imágenes
    2. Impresión de fotografías
    3. Uso compartido de fotografías en línea
    4. Optimización de imágenes
    5. Optimización de imágenes para el formato JPEG
    6. Tramado en imágenes Web
    7. Edición guiada - Panel Compartir
    8. Previsualización de imágenes Web
    9. Uso de transparencia y mates
    10. Optimización de imágenes para los formatos GIF o PNG-8
    11. Optimización de imágenes para el formato PNG-24
  13. Métodos abreviados de teclado
    1. Teclas para seleccionar herramientas
    2. Teclas para seleccionar y mover objetos
    3. Teclas para el panel Capas
    4. Teclas para mostrar u ocultar los paneles (modo Experto)
    5. Teclas para pintura y pinceles
    6. Teclas para utilizar texto
    7. Teclas para el filtro Licuar
    8. Teclas para transformar selecciones
    9. Teclas para el panel Muestras de color
    10. Teclas para el cuadro de diálogo Camera Raw
    11. Teclas para la Galería de filtros
    12. Teclas para utilizar modos de fusión
    13. Teclas para ver imágenes (modo avanzado)

Sharpening overview

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. When sharpening images, keep the following in mind:

  • Sharpening cannot correct a severely blurred image.

  • Sharpen your image on a separate layer so that you can resharpen it later if you need to change the adjustment. Set the layer’s blending mode to Luminosity to avoid color shifts along edges. If you find that highlights or shadows are lessened after you sharpen, use the layer blending controls to prevent sharpening in highlights and shadows.

  • 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 captured by a scanner or digital camera. After you’ve color corrected and resized your image, sharpen it again.

  • If possible, judge your sharpening by outputting your image. The amount of sharpening needed varies depending on whether the image is printed or displayed on a web page.

Sharpen an image

The Auto Sharpen command increases clarity or focus without the risk of oversharpening an image.

The Sharpen tool focuses soft edges in a photo to increase clarity or focus. Oversharpening a photo gives it a grainy look. You can avoid oversharpening by setting a lower Strength value in the options bar. It’s best to make the sharpening subtle and increase it as necessary by dragging over the area several times, building up the sharpness each time.

The Adjust Sharpness dialog box has sharpening controls not available with the Sharpen tool or with Auto Sharpen. You can set the sharpening algorithm or control the amount of sharpening that occurs in shadow and highlight areas.

Automatically sharpen an image

  1. Choose Enhance > Auto Sharpen.

Sharpen areas of an image

Original image (top), two faces sharpened correctly (bottom left), and two faces oversharpened (bottom right)

  1. Select the Sharpen tool  .
  2. Set options in the options bar:

    Mode

    Determines how the paint that you apply blends with the existing pixels in the image.

    Brush

    Sets the brush tip. Click the arrow next to the brush sample, choose a brush category from the Brushes menu, and then select a brush thumbnail.

    Size

    Sets the size of the brush, in pixels. Drag the Size pop‑up slider or enter a size in the text box.

    Strength

    Specifies the amount of sharpening that occurs with each stroke.

    Sample All Layers

    Sharpens all visible layers. If this is deselected, the tool sharpens only the active layer.

    Protect Detail

    Select Protect Detail to enhance details and minimize pixelated artifacts. Deselect this option if you want to produce more exaggerated sharpening effects

  3. Drag over the part of the image you want to sharpen.

Precisely sharpen an image

  1. Choose Enhance > Adjust Sharpness.

  2. Select Preview check box.
  3. Set any of the following options to sharpen your image, and then click OK.

    Amount

    Sets the amount of sharpening. Type a number in the box or drag the slider to increase or decrease the contrast between edge pixels, giving the appearance of greater sharpness.

    Radius

    Determines the number of pixels surrounding the edge pixels affected by the sharpening. Type a number in the box or drag the slider to change the radius value. As you increase the radius, sharpening becomes more obvious.

    Remove

    Sets the sharpening algorithm used to sharpen the image. Gaussian Blur is the method used by the Unsharp Mask filter. Lens Blur detects the edges and detail in an image, and provides finer sharpening of detail and reduced sharpening halos. Motion Blur attempts to reduce the effects of blur due to camera or subject movement. Select a blur option from the pop‑up menu.

    Angle

    Sets the direction of motion for the Motion Blur option of the Remove control. Type a number in the box or drag the angle dial to change the angle percentage to the left (counterclockwise) or right (clockwise).

    More Refined

    Processes the file more slowly for more accurate blur removal.

Use the Unsharp Mask filter

The Unsharp Mask filter reproduces a traditional film technique used to sharpen edges in an image. The Unsharp Mask filter corrects blur introduced during photographing, scanning, resampling, or printing. It is useful for images intended for both print and online viewing.  

Unsharp Mask locates pixels that differ from surrounding pixels by the threshold you specify and increases the pixels’ contrast by the amount you specify. For neighboring pixels within the specified radius, the lighter pixels get lighter, and the darker pixels get darker.

The effects of the Unsharp Mask filter are far more pronounced on‑screen than in high-resolution printed output. If your final destination is printed output, experiment to determine what settings work best for your image.

The Unsharp Mask filter adds contrast to reduce fuzziness.

  1. In the Edit workspace, select an image, layer, or area.
  2. Choose Enhance  > Unsharp Mask.
  3. Select the Preview option.
  4. Set any of these options and click OK:

    Amount

    Determines how much to increase the contrast of pixels. For high-resolution printed images, an amount between 150% and 200% is usually best.

    Radius

    Specifies the number of pixels to sharpen around edges. For high-resolution images, a radius between 1 and 2 is usually recommended. A lower value sharpens only the edge pixels, whereas a higher value sharpens a wider band of pixels. This effect is much less noticeable in print than on‑screen, because a 2‑pixel radius represents a smaller area in a high-resolution printed image.

    Threshold

    Determines how far different pixels must be from the surrounding area before they are considered edge pixels and sharpened. To avoid introducing noise (in images with flesh tones, for example), experiment with Threshold values between 2 and 20. The default Threshold value (0) sharpens all pixels in the image.

Shake Reduction

Introduced in Photoshop Elements 14

When a camera or the photographer shakes while taking a picture, blurriness caused by the camera shake is introduced in the picture. It is not always possible to maintain high-shutter speeds to avoid camera shake. Taking pictures in low-light conditions may require the shutter to be open for long - resulting in shake-induced blur. Also, if the picture is taken from a moving vehicle, the image may turn out blurred due to shake caused by an uneven road.

You can reduce shake-induced blur in a photo using two methods: automatic and manual.

Automatic Shake Reduction

  1. Open a photograph from the Photo Bin.

  2. Choose Enhance > Auto Shake Reduction.

  3. (Optional) If you are not satisfied with the result, click Enhanced > Automatic Shake Reduction, to run the process again.

  4. In case you are unable to achieve shake reduction with the automatic mode, try reducing shake with the manual option.

Manual Shake Reduction

  1. Open a photograph from the Photo Bin.

  2. Click Enhance > Shake Reduction.

  3. When the Shake reduction dialog starts, Photoshop Elements places a Shake Region on the image and starts to analyze the portion of the image for shake. When analysis is done, shake correction are applied across the photo.

    The Shake Reduction dialog

  4. Use the Sensitivity Slider to vary the shake threshold. Increasing the sensitivity may improve the resultant image.

  5. Use the pin () at the center of a Shake Region to move it around. When you move a Shake Region, the area under the region is re-analyzed for shake corrections, and the image is optimized again.

  6. To further analyze the photograph and reduce blurriness, add more Shake Regions.

    1. Do one of the following:
      • Use the mouse to draw a rectangular shape on any part of the photo.
      • Click the Shake Region icon () in the Shake Reduction dialog.
    2. Use the Sensitivity Slider to vary the shake threshold.

    The new Shake Region is analyzed and corrections are applied.

    Nota:

    Draw Shake Reduction regions over areas of the image that have visible and prominent levels of blurring.

    The Shake Reduction dialog. The Shake Region at the lower-right corner is currently being processed, and the progress bar is visible.

    Nota:

    If the Shake Region created does not have enough area or information to sample the amount of shake, a warning () appears within the Shake Region. Use the handles of the Shake Region to increase the size of the Shake Region.

  7. (Optional) If you do not want to use a Shake Region:

    • To temporarily exclude the Shake Region from being used to analyze the photo, click the pin to indicate it is excluded ().
    • To remove a Shake Region, select the pin of the region and click the delete icon () at the upper-right corner of the Shake Region.
  8. Use the Before/After toggle button to quickly view the original image and the current shake-corrected image.

  9. Click OK to continue.

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