For the next few posts, I’ll be showing images that have been downsampled using several different algorithms Photoshop’s bilinear interpolation Ps bicubic sharper Lightroom export with no sharpening Lr export with Low, Standard, and High sharpening for glossy paper A complicated filter based on Elliptical Weighted Averaging (EWA), performed at two gammas and blended at… [Read More]
Archives for September 2014
Lightroom downsizing: export sharpening noise effects
Yesterday I reported on the amount of noise, and the spectra, of noisy test images exported from Lightroom with sharpening turned off. Today we’ll see what happens when it’s set. Here’s the test protocol. The target image is a 4000×4000 sRGB, with each plane filled with a constant signal of half-scale, (0.5, 127.5, or 32767.5,… [Read More]
Noise effects in Lightroom downsized exporting
In the last two posts, I delved into how well Photoshop (Ps) does in minimizing photon noise when downsizing images using bilinear and bicubic sharper interpolation. Today I’m turning my attention to Lightroom (Lr). With Lr, you don’t get to choose your resampling algorithm or the gamma of the space in which Lr does the… [Read More]
Noise effects of Photoshop Bicubic Sharper downsizing
Same test image as yesterday 4000×4000 monochromatic, 16-bit gray gamma 2.2, filled with a constant signal of half-scale, (0.5, 127.5, or 32767.5, depending on how you think of it), with Gaussian noise with standard deviation of 1/10 scale added to it. The image was created in Matlab, written out as a 16-bit TIFF, read into… [Read More]
Noise effects of Photoshop bilinear interpolation downsizing
When I last left you, the jury was out on the issue of whether the bilinear interpolation downsizing algorithm in Photoshop was the same as the one in Matlab. The jury is back. “Mr. Foreman, have the jury reached a verdict?” “We have, your honor.” “May I hear it?” “The algorithms are wildly different, as… [Read More]