Subject | Re: Lenses and sharpening |
From | PeterN |
Date | 09/19/2014 15:12 (09/19/2014 09:12) |
Message-ID | <lvha2q05ld@news4.newsguy.com> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | rec.photo.digital |
Follows | nospam |
Followups | Whisky-dave (2h & 42m) nospam (3h & 38m) > PeterN |
nospamAnother twist. Go purchase some more eggs. they will not be scrambled.
In article <id5n1at4fms8lm49l2sno0usts2u1qcbab@4ax.com>, Eric Stevens <eric.stevens@sum.co.nz>wrote:nospamEric StevensEric Stevensnospam
This discussion started when in response to Kevin McMurtrie Floyd wrote in Message-ID: <87bnqh1mby.fld@barrow.com>
">The digital form of unsharp mask is the inverse of a blur.nospamEric Stevens
There's both a frequency (diameter) and an intensity.
Not the case. It is the high pass sharpen tool that is the inverse of blur. They can use the exact same algorithm with different parameters. Using one and then the other virtually reverses the results.
UnSharpMask is not reversible."
You completely failed to understand what Floyd was talking about and have added your inestimable contributions ever since.
once again, in a non-destructive workflow, unsharp mask along with everything else *is* reversible. this is a fact no matter how much you and floyd argue otherwise.
It's not a reversible process as it is conventionally defined.
yes it is.
someone can unsharp mask today and remove it tomorrow and put it back the day after that.
the following week, that same someone can remove all colour (convert to b/w) and the week after that, can reverse that, exactly how it was in the original image, because it *is* the original image.
that's what just about everyone would call reversible.