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.
- In
the Editor, select an image, layer, or area.
- Choose Enhance > Unsharp Mask.
- Select the Preview option.
- 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.
|
|