Hey folks, Any suggestions for removing artifacts in the sky areas? I have Photoshop CS5 and rarely use layers. I do a lot of selecting areas and working that way. Any suggestions or tutorials. Thanks,,,,,,,,Steve
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JPG Sky Artifact Removal
Click to view my pictures on Jetphotos.net. Thanks!!
http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=5984Tags: None
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Originally posted by steve View PostHey folks, Any suggestions for removing artifacts in the sky areas? I have Photoshop CS5 and rarely use layers. I do a lot of selecting areas and working that way. Any suggestions or tutorials. Thanks,,,,,,,,Steve
2) if they were not natively in the scene/image, best way to 'remove' things is to avoid them being there in the first place.
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Originally posted by steve View PostHey folks, Any suggestions for removing artifacts in the sky areas? I have Photoshop CS5 and rarely use layers. I do a lot of selecting areas and working that way. Any suggestions or tutorials. Thanks,,,,,,,,Steve
Humbly I would try my contribution here:
I've addressed this issue a number of times on this forum, appealed a number of rejected photos with JPEG-Compression artifacts, investigate this phenomenon on the web, approached Canon corp. UK advisers, thereafter with a help of a scientist expert of light-photons who is working in a High-Tech co., and the conclusion learnt is this:
The basic of this phenomenon is light-heat differentials, measured by Kelvin-Numbers, when greater than 8000 (on hot sky) would create radiant-spots i.e. artifacts on the "sky" space of the picture and /or upon the outlines of the plane fuselage (compression by itself would also happened when there is too much/extensive crop of the original picture).
I do PP only with Canon-DPP, do not apply any further process – and yet, most of my "summer photos" of planes have some sort of artifacts.
I do not know of any software that can remove artifacts.
So, as Dana stated – try to avoid them, take photos on early mornings. Reckon it occurred mostly in late spring through summer – especially if you live in a hot country, Israel is my home-base.
Hope I managed to clarify by a bit.
Ike Harel
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Originally posted by steve View PostHey folks, Any suggestions for removing artifacts in the sky areas? I have Photoshop CS5 and rarely use layers. I do a lot of selecting areas and working that way. Any suggestions or tutorials. Thanks,,,,,,,,Steve
Regards,
Alex
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Thanks for the help and information guys. There are a million ways to somewhat reduce the artifacts, but I'd like to completely remove the whole mess with a blur or something like selecting the sky and adding color or something. Anyway, Thanks for the info. Check this picture and the sky area.Click to view my pictures on Jetphotos.net. Thanks!!
http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=5984
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Originally posted by steve View PostThere are a million ways to somewhat reduce the artifacts, but I'd like to completely remove the whole mess with a blur or something like selecting the sky and adding color or something.
Arguably the opposite is necessary - more noise. I played around with your photo to illustrate that point - see attached. Note that I wasn't too careful with feathering so there are areas near the aircraft that don't look great when equalized.
Don't get me wrong, I would not remove noise just to add it back in later in the process. Avoiding excessive noise reduction (in its many forms) to begin with and saving at max JPEG quality are the way to go to avoid banding and blotching. I noticed the file you had above was only about 350kb for a 1920px wide picture - maybe you are not saving at max JPEG quality?
Regards,
Alex
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Quebec Golf,
Hey Thanks for your feedback and work on the picture. Yeah I guess blurring etc would cause banding and blotching. I'm in no way any kind of PS scholar. I rarely use layers.
I still think there's a way to select the sky area and do a blur or something like that. Can't do too much or the subject will get edgy and stand out. I try to avoid mid day pictures, but when that rare sighting 747 comes in, you have to shoot it. My best stuff is late evening light. Thanks again. I'll keep working at it.Click to view my pictures on Jetphotos.net. Thanks!!
http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=5984
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ikeharel,
Thanks a lot for your time and effort. You did some serious research on the topic. I'm not smart enough to understand all that tech. I'm old school and kinda lazy I guess.
If I find something that works, that's all I need even if I don't understand it. Somehow I've been able to put together a few nice images on Jets. One thing I did do was increase my resolution say from 300 to 600 pixels per inch and save the image at max and 3 passes. Anyway, on we go. Thanks again.Click to view my pictures on Jetphotos.net. Thanks!!
http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=5984
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