Recently I complained about over-sharpening of photos, which I found might spoil finer nuances. I asked ipernity if they were aware of the fact and if so, if they were planning to do something about it. I got a swift reply they were working on a fix.
Just some minutes ago I got a mail from ipernity that the fix was released and if I would like the new algorithm? Well, my answer is YES I LIKE THE NEW ALGORITHM! Thank you very much!
Just as a comparison between the old and new version
old
|
| zigzag |
new
|
| zigzag test |
old
|
| Tree No 1030092 |
new
|
| Tree No 1030092 test |
Click on the pictures and switch to the largest version to see the differences best. Especially the old version of the tree photo suffers from a rather intense halo glowing.
Yup I like the new algorithm much, much better, thanks :-) Keep up the great work!
Best regards Alan
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Danypro says:
Thomas says:
--
Coming from a user's blog (?)
Soepkipjepro says:
Alan says:
Heb pas gezien, dat het ook op ipernity's blog te lezen staat.
Just seen that ipernity announced it on their blog
www.ipernity.com/blog/team/65987
Alan edited this comment 17 months ago.
Soepkipjepro replies:
And a small correction not 'announced it a couple of days ago' but this afternoon
Alan replies:
Alan edited this comment 17 months ago.
Chris82pro says:
Alan replies:
But as you can see in my examples the new algorithm is much closer to the intention of the original than the old, especially the tree example shows nicely that oversharpening could spoil a photo completely. While post-processing on a website makes sense with photos that weren't post-processed at all, I don't think it makes too much sense on a site like ipernity where most people spend considerable time in post-processing to achieve a certain effect.
Besides that I do think that too much sharpening is a misguided perception which came up with digital photography, quite some people seem to believe that adding contrast, saturation and sharpness are the basic ingredients of a good picture. Well ....
Actually before the change I used to make different versions of my pics depending on where I uploaded them. For ipernity I switched on halo control which I usually don't need to use on my photos, just to balance the aggressive sharpening of the old algorithm.
Alan edited this comment 17 months ago.
Дон Андреpro replies:
misanthrop replies:
that said: yes, i know there are lots of examples with too much sharpening, but i might add that usually sharpening is only part of the problem there. take a look at this and cry: www.modellbahnboerse.org/rocokran2/IMG_2467.jpg
(the site www.modellbahnboerse.org is acutally a very good resource for lots and lots and lots and lots and - guess what? - even more lots of pictures in a very unique style. i tried to copy the style once but didn't succeed.)
i couldn't care less what thumbnails look like on ipernity, but your examples are a bit larger than thumbnails, so quality is an issue. the new version is much better, no doubt about that.
Alan replies:
Actually we're talking about the same thing, I guess. See here: www.ipernity.com/blog/pedjap/66532