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View Full Version : Acheiving Sharpness - hmmmm



mikew09
15-02-2012, 9:30am
Been taking photos now about 2.5 yrs - never been a real quick learner :-). Now I am not saying my images are not sharp but when I look at some of the portrait images taken with a 50D on say 500pix, I just don't seem to be achieving that a consistent, well, razor sharp image. I am still very much a budding amateur photographer but I and still struggle at times with achieving sharpness, especially in portraits. Am I alone here or can some of the more experienced photogs provide any tips in processing etc to move to the next step of sharpness. As an example the below image was taken in doors:

50D
ISO 100
Canon 24-105 L lens @ 24mm, IS on (not tripod mounted)
shutter 1/800
f/6.3
580 EX speedlite on camera with small white diffuser
430 speedlite off camera mounted about 45 degree to subject

RAW image looks basically sharp ready for processing

I use lightroom 3.x to process but noticed if I apply some high pass layer adjustments in PSE 9 it improves the sharpness but still does not seem to get that razor edge finish.

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7054/6878059029_11377381e0_b.jpg

mikew09
15-02-2012, 9:38am
OH, I forgot to mention. I am ordering another 430 EX speelite this week to allow for two off camera flashes.

mudman
15-02-2012, 9:41am
wuth a cuttie like that and that smile what tha heck
the mouth area is definately sharp

zollo
15-02-2012, 9:42am
where was teh focus point for this nice shot? the doggy seems to be teh focal point to me, as the area in focus seems to be falling off by the time i look up the top left of the baby's head. the sharpness is not bad at all, i dont know if you'd want to sharpen a lot more than this for portraits

Kym
15-02-2012, 9:42am
Sharpness is a bourgeois concept - Henri Cartier-Bresson. :D

I like it!

mikew09
15-02-2012, 9:50am
Thanks mudman - yea, she is a cutie this little one and I agree, sharpness is not really an issue for this portrait. Mostly an example of max sharpness achieved. If I push the boundaries any harder in pp over sharping issues start to become an issue. So I figure it must be with my initial shot or my technique although the RAW image looks pretty good.

But again - isn't she a darling - OH, did I forget to mention she is my second granddaughter :-)

mikew09
15-02-2012, 9:52am
where was teh focus point for this nice shot? the doggy seems to be teh focal point to me, as the area in focus seems to be falling off by the time i look up the top left of the baby's head. the sharpness is not bad at all, i dont know if you'd want to sharpen a lot more than this for portraits

Focus point was on the eye zollo as I tend to do with any portrait shots I do. So are you thinking it may be micro adjust needed - have not really played with micro adjust to much as it is another beast to get right?

mikew09
15-02-2012, 9:57am
Thanks Kym, oh yea - I am not unhappy with sharpness in most my photos, having said that, I see some model like shots with the 50D and do wonder what it takes to achieve that super sharp shot, considering I have the same kit as some shots I see on this forum and some semi pro sights. May not be a skill I will always apply but I figure it will aide my skill set.
I know lighting plays a big role and will soon have a couple of stands with umbrellas to mount the 430's on.

10 yrs off retirement and hoping to make a supplement (part time) income when I retire from photography around the place, need an way to cover the cost to keep my kit up to date when I retire :-(

zollo
15-02-2012, 10:26am
Focus point was on the eye zollo as I tend to do with any portrait shots I do. So are you thinking it may be micro adjust needed - have not really played with micro adjust to much as it is another beast to get right?

i wouldnt micro adjust just yet, but i would test the cameras af further to see if it needed it. how? try manual focusing, using live view and full magnification of the focus point and compare it to an identical shot using the cameras af only. youd have to keep the setting idenical and use a subject that moves a little less than your granddaughter (maybe the eye of the stuffed toy:D)

wedgtail
15-02-2012, 10:28am
Would this lens be front focusing to my eye the ear of the dog is sharper than the focus point of the eye. I like the shot, cute subject.

mikew09
15-02-2012, 10:37am
i wouldnt micro adjust just yet, but i would test the cameras af further to see if it needed it. how? try manual focusing, using live view and full magnification of the focus point and compare it to an identical shot using the cameras af only. youd have to keep the setting identical and use a subject that moves a little less than your granddaughter (maybe the eye of the stuffed toy:D)

Thanks Zollo, actually you make a good point that one would assume I had considered - drrr. I would think 1/800 shutter would be sufficient but yea, Abbie is a pretty active little one and defiantly not posing perfectly still. I might re-assess some images to check this out. Maybe it is just that very thing as some of my recent self portraits I have been playing with have managed to achieve that razor sharp look.

mikew09
15-02-2012, 10:46am
Would this lens be front focusing to my eye the ear of the dog is sharper than the focus point of the eye. I like the shot, cute subject.

Thanks wedgtail, I was thinking maybe micro-adjust too but Zollo has also made a very good point. See how this goes. I tried micro adjust on my 70-200 but to be honest I think I made things worse from what was not really a non issue :-). Having said that, I have read a few threads that in view of positives with micro-adjust.

thanks,

Mike

mikew09
15-02-2012, 10:52am
I just another look at this image in raw @ 100% and the ear does look sharper, also I noticed tht the button on the front of the bond suite are also quite noticebly sharper. I also forgot to mention my self portraits were taken with my Sigma 10-20mm.

Art Vandelay
15-02-2012, 12:00pm
Sharpness in that image looks fine to me at that size, what you may be comparing to on the site you mentioned is images taken with a good quality prime lens. Whilst the 24-105 is sharp, a good prime will have the edge on it.

Rattus79
15-02-2012, 12:07pm
Um, Is it just me but you say you were lighting this with speed lights and have stated a shutter of 1/800??

I thought the 50d had a max flash sync of 1/250??

(ps I thought it plenty sharp enough, but without the full size file its hard to tell)

mikew09
15-02-2012, 12:46pm
Sharpness in that image looks fine to me at that size, what you may be comparing to on the site you mentioned is images taken with a good quality prime lens. Whilst the 24-105 is sharp, a good prime will have the edge on it.
Sharpness is still pretty good say at A4 too - good point, I may have had some assumptions when looking at the shots, I will look at the site again to see if all were 24-105 L lens.

mikew09
15-02-2012, 12:53pm
Um, Is it just me but you say you were lighting this with speed lights and have stated a shutter of 1/800??

I thought the 50d had a max flash sync of 1/250??

(ps I thought it plenty sharp enough, but without the full size file its hard to tell)

Hi Greg, yep default sync is 1/250 on the 50D but if you enable high speed sync on the flash (I think it is called high speed sync) you can run shutter speeds all the way to 1/8000, not that you would want to do that. I think there is a chance of the shutter being captured in the frame at higher speeds but I have never had the problem.

Rattus79
15-02-2012, 1:27pm
Uh Huh! that makes more sense to me now, for some reason I thoght you were using Yongano flashes that dont' support HSS.

Ezookiel
15-02-2012, 5:59pm
My 60D was giving me all sorts of problems with focus. I ended up sending it back to have the issue corrected. It was focussing about 10mm behind what it thought it was focussing on. Yours may be focussing slightly in front of what it thinks it's focussed on. Try a test with one of the focus charts to make sure. If it comes out fine then you know there's another issue, and if it does show a focus problem, you'll have a photo of the chart to send in with the camera to get it fixed. It made such a huge difference to mine that I've gone from wanting to sell it off, to wanting to keep it.

jjphoto
15-02-2012, 6:09pm
Forgive me if I'm repeating that which has already been said, as I haven't read all the replies, but maybe the OP is having an issue with the sharpness in the resized image rather then the original file. I suspect that the 24-105 will be very sharp at mid apertures so sharpness in the original file shouldn't be an issue, assuming good photo techniques are employed (which I suspect is the subject of most of the replies).

I would suggest that maybe the issue is the resizing and sharpening technique used. I simply use Photoshop and resize and sharpen once but I know that some people use a multi step resize/sharpen process which gives a much sharper looking image in the resized file, presumably as less data is lost along the way, or at least utilised better. I have no idea how to do it but Google is your friend. No doubt there are posts about it on the interweb, maybe on other forums or maybe there are folks here who go to the trouble and can contribute.

Consideration must be given to the jpeg compression used as this will obviously reduce sharpness in the final resized image.

JJ

mikew09
15-02-2012, 10:02pm
Hmm - been doing some testing and I dont see any real evident of front focus. Lens looks to be pretty good actually.

fillum
16-02-2012, 3:23pm
I use lightroom 3.x to process but noticed if I apply some high pass layer adjustments in PSE 9 it improves the sharpness but still does not seem to get that razor edge finish.Hi Mike. I'm finding that I can't get images as sharp as I want out of LR3 (but that could be due to incompetence :o) and often have to pull them into PSE to give an additional sharpen.

To me, the bub's face here looks plenty sharp, but think it could be sharpened further. When I sharpen in PSE I generally use UnSharp-Mask (USM) - I only use a High-Pass layer if I want to bring out some texture detail. I wonder if in your image above the high-pass layer has accentuated the texture in the toy giving the impression that it is sharper than the baby's face (which would be comparatively smooth) ? Perhaps try to select only the baby's face (just roughly with the elliptical marque with a bit of feathering will do) and apply some USM in PSE (maybe 80% / 1.1 / 0) and see how it looks.

In PSE I generally select the subject (roughly) and only apply sharpening to the subject area. (After all, if you've gone to the trouble of blurring the background you don't want to sharpen it again in PP). Sometimes if required I'll do a second selection around the eyes only and apply a bit more sharpening to that area.

Hope this helps...



Cheers.

mikew09
16-02-2012, 5:32pm
Hi Mike. I'm finding that I can't get images as sharp as I want out of LR3 (but that could be due to incompetence :o) and often have to pull them into PSE to give an additional sharpen.

To me, the bub's face here looks plenty sharp, but think it could be sharpened further. When I sharpen in PSE I generally use UnSharp-Mask (USM) - I only use a High-Pass layer if I want to bring out some texture detail. I wonder if in your image above the high-pass layer has accentuated the texture in the toy giving the impression that it is sharper than the baby's face (which would be comparatively smooth) ? Perhaps try to select only the baby's face (just roughly with the elliptical marque with a bit of feathering will do) and apply some USM in PSE (maybe 80% / 1.1 / 0) and see how it looks.

In PSE I generally select the subject (roughly) and only apply sharpening to the subject area. (After all, if you've gone to the trouble of blurring the background you don't want to sharpen it again in PP). Sometimes if required I'll do a second selection around the eyes only and apply a bit more sharpening to that area.

Hope this helps...


Cheers.

Thanks Phil, It is interesting you say that about LR3 as I have thought that a few times when reviewing photo but I have a pretty strong graduated refraction on my glasses so thought it may just be me (hence I rarely manual focus and even people with good eyesight) but it is interesting to hear someone else have a similar comment. I am going to try sharping the same image in PSE tonight to see what the difference is - thanks,

Mike

mikew09
16-02-2012, 7:55pm
OK, as Phil suggested - processed in LR3 but sharpened in PSE as well as I understand USharp in PSE and then saved to jpeg in PSE - seems to me it is a sharper image - thoughts. I have suspected my images are sharpen in PSE than light room but like I said, I have strongly refracted graduated glasses and thought it may just be me. But the final image does seem better sharpened in PSE. ??

Orig Post - sharpened in LR3

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7054/6878059029_11377381e0_b.jpg

Processed in LR, sharpened and saved in PSE
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7040/6885485343_082b0f002a_b.jpg

mikew09
16-02-2012, 10:11pm
And this is a combination of both
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7037/6885907357_f998c3216b_b.jpg

Mary Anne
17-02-2012, 1:36pm
Mike your little Granddaughter is so cute, I love this portrait :th3:

mikew09
17-02-2012, 4:57pm
Thanks Mary, yep she is a cutie. 2nd granddaughter of my other Little darling Maddie is almost three now but suffers Rets and was not in the mood for sharing the frame on this day. Very proud of my too grand girls.

Thanks