![]() You’ve color corrected and resized your image, sharpen it again. Time to correct blur captured by a scanner or digital camera. Sharpen your image multiple times in small amounts. If you need to reduce image noise, do so before sharpening so that you Highlights or shadows are lessened after you sharpen, use the layerīlending controls to prevent sharpening in highlights and shadows. Mode to Luminosity to avoid color shifts along edges. Later if you need to change the adjustment. Sharpen your image on a separate layer so that you can resharpen it Sharpening cannot correct a severely blurred image. When sharpening images, keep the following in Images come from a digital camera or a scanner, most images canīenefit from sharpening. Sharpening enhances the definition of edges in an image. But "sharpen" does not add information (more pixels), it just makes the edges look less blurry and more definitive. Photoshop does allow you to "sharpen" images by enhancing edge definition. The low-rez photos would look good on a small screen but would look pixelated when printed in a large format. In the old days when storage was at a premium, a lot of folks would save images at excessively low resolutions. ![]() You cannot add information to a photo once saved. Yes, some of the expensive phones like iPhones, Pixels, and Samsung phones may have great phone cameras but you'll still get better quality with a good camera. Phone cameras, even with higher resolution, usually can't deliver the quality of a real camera. If you want to print out pictures or make books in the future, I suggest you buy a real camera. If the prints you make look OK, then try the book. Shutterfly probably does the same thing when they make their books. FYI, photo websites that sell prints will automatically resample your images before printing and may upsample automatically. Print at about the same size they would be printed in the book. You might simply try printing a few of your questionable phone pictures before making a book and see how they look without any upsampling. I wouldn't be surprised if there are websites that will upsmple for you automatically - it's a fairly easy thing to do. If you can use some free version of Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro on a Windows PC, that might work for you too. There are a lot of tutorials online, but it may still take you a long time to figure out. It's a very powerful program, though unfortunately it's also a bit complex to learn. I use a free image editing program called GIMP. I'm not sure you can upsample with Paint - I doubt it. Upsampling can work to a degree but too much upsampling will degrade the quality of the picture anyway, defeating the purpose. However, note that you may not be thrilled with the results. ![]() You can try "upsampling." This will increase the resolution of the original pictures by adding more pixels - software guesses where they should be.
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