Birds In Flight - Post Yours!

Great tit
Great tit.jpg
 
Buller's Shearwater, Kaikoura, NZ. I used Topaz Sharpen AI on this, which I find really aggressive and difficult to tame, but needs must: the original really was soft as butter. Not sure why. It should have been sharp at 1/1600, but rainy day, moving boat, moving bird (probably moving photographer too). I think it's passable though.
Buller's Shearwater.jpg
 
I used Topaz Sharpen AI on this, which I find really aggressive and difficult to tame,

After sharpening I had to re-soften some nasty white sharpening artefacts.
I only use Topaz Denoise and it too sharpens so aggressively that I try to avoid using it. But I when I do use it I too clean up those sharpening halos. You would think that turning off sharpening altogether would actually turn it off, but it doesn't. Set sharpening to zero and it still sharpens. :banghead:

That's why I switched to DXO Pure Raw. I apply it on the RAW file before I do anything else and I find it's wonderful. If I need to sharpen a little bit after editing and downsizing I will either do it myself the old fashioned way with an edge mask and Smart Sharpen. Or take it to LAB mode and do a High Pass on the lightness channel.
 
I only use Topaz Denoise and it too sharpens so aggressively that I try to avoid using it. But I when I do use it I too clean up those sharpening halos. You would think that turning off sharpening altogether would actually turn it off, but it doesn't. Set sharpening to zero and it still sharpens. :banghead:

That's why I switched to DXO Pure Raw. I apply it on the RAW file before I do anything else and I find it's wonderful. If I need to sharpen a little bit after editing and downsizing I will either do it myself the old fashioned way with an edge mask and Smart Sharpen. Or take it to LAB mode and do a High Pass on the lightness channel.
Thanks for that. I might look into DXO Pure Raw. I know what you mean about Topaz Denoise. Most of the time I find its sharpening OK and infinitely preferable to Topaz Sharpen, but maybe I'm not critical enough. When the standard setting overdoes it I use the low light setting, even if the shot is outside on a sunny day. That often works well.
 
Thanks for that. I might look into DXO Pure Raw. I know what you mean about Topaz Denoise. Most of the time I find its sharpening OK and infinitely preferable to Topaz Sharpen, but maybe I'm not critical enough. When the standard setting overdoes it I use the low light setting, even if the shot is outside on a sunny day. That often works well.
Yes, I do the same, I choose the Low Light setting most often as it seems to sharpen the least but what Low Light does is give very ugly edge artifacts, not unlike chromatic aberrations. But I clean those up later and then the end result is pretty decent.
 
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