This was a great video. Sometimes tossing the photo is not an option especially when you only have one chance to get the shot and the subject is moving or your focus is off. Great video really helped me out a ton!
I like all your vids but this one wasn't all that great. You're basically taking a blurry photo and sharpening it. It still looks like a blurry photo in the end. I usually just toss out blurry photos and I thought this might change my mind about that. Not really. Nice effort though. I'm sure some people might find this useful.
That's a different matter, what happening there is that photoshop is having to literally guess the extra information of the image to make it bigger... there's really no way around the fact that images, when enlarged, become blurry. You can fix it somewhat, by follow the techniques of the video AFTER you've enlarged the image.
Also, depending on your version of Photoshop, when you go to Image > Image Size, there's a combo box at the bottom, set it to Bicubic Smoother.
Try altering the distance between the camera and the object. If it's always very blurry no matter the distance, then I'm afraid there's not much to be done. You can try to be more aggressive on the "High Pass" filter, but like I say on the video, it doesn't do miracles.
You could also try using your camera in a setting where there is more light. Some cameras (such as my previous one) only take decent pictures when they have a lot of light.
This was a great video. Sometimes tossing the photo is not an option especially when you only have one chance to get the shot and the subject is moving or your focus is off. Great video really helped me out a ton!
sobutifulnluv 1 year ago 7
i found that this method works well with some photos and not so much with others, i really liked this video ty
eli0145 2 years ago 4
I like all your vids but this one wasn't all that great. You're basically taking a blurry photo and sharpening it. It still looks like a blurry photo in the end. I usually just toss out blurry photos and I thought this might change my mind about that. Not really. Nice effort though. I'm sure some people might find this useful.
Klif 2 years ago 30
@Klif There's only so much you can do. You're right, usually tossing a blurry photo is the best thing. When you can't, this is as good as it gets.
photoshopuniverse 2 years ago 31
thx. very usefull.
danelolivaw 2 years ago
thanks it's great
25GARCE 2 years ago
Thanks for the tutorial.
LatinFlavor96 2 years ago
Great video, Thanks, it helped a lot!!!
cocodrilo1313 2 years ago
Interesing....Thanks.
crazyDOORcom 2 years ago
Heey! Just what I was looking for! TNX!
nazzeslo 2 years ago
Brilliant tutorial...helped me a lot...thanks...you have a new subscriber...
elkopite 2 years ago
hey can you help me out here??
i got this really small picture but when i make it bigger it becomes all blurry how do i fix it
new239soldier 2 years ago 9
Hey soldier,
That's a different matter, what happening there is that photoshop is having to literally guess the extra information of the image to make it bigger... there's really no way around the fact that images, when enlarged, become blurry. You can fix it somewhat, by follow the techniques of the video AFTER you've enlarged the image.
Also, depending on your version of Photoshop, when you go to Image > Image Size, there's a combo box at the bottom, set it to Bicubic Smoother.
photoshopuniverse 2 years ago 4
Thanks for the tut. man.
AMVPlayaTV 2 years ago
Your tutorials are amazing.
Quixomo 2 years ago
cool thanks
adriancheetos 2 years ago
This video was just what I was looking for and very simple to fallow. Thank you very much,
Karen
akiglesias 2 years ago
its anyway to fix very very blurry photos?? my cam is very low quality and the photos a
re very blurry help me pls
esmoriz33 2 years ago 2
Try altering the distance between the camera and the object. If it's always very blurry no matter the distance, then I'm afraid there's not much to be done. You can try to be more aggressive on the "High Pass" filter, but like I say on the video, it doesn't do miracles.
photoshopuniverse 2 years ago 2
You could also try using your camera in a setting where there is more light. Some cameras (such as my previous one) only take decent pictures when they have a lot of light.
AMVPlayaTV 2 years ago