Luminous Landscape Forum
Raw & Post Processing, Printing => Adobe Lightroom Q&A => Topic started by: Pete JF on June 29, 2015, 03:53:24 pm
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Hi Folks,
Prepping some images for Web use and wondering what kind of scheme you guys are using for web-bound images?
Do you add a bit of sharpening in the Develop module and then, when converting images to Jpeg, select "sharpen for screen" in the given doses?
Is there a better way to zone in on what you want?
I'm in Lightroom 5
Thanks.
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The sharpening in Develop is not related to web use, but is about correcting the softness of the raw file. Apply it on that basis.
You then apply export sharpening. One key for web use is to export images at exactly the dimensions at which they will be used on the web, and apply LR export sharpening. This means you can review the JPEGs and see exactly how the sharpening affects them. However, how they will be used on the web can vary and some web applications will apply sharpening, in which case you might not even want to sharpen in export. You may want to explain a bit more detail about what you're doing - eg building a static web site or uploading full res images which will be resized by the server.
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Hi John and thanks,
I'm preparing these for submission to a jury for a show.
The final work will be in printed form but some images may be on a show related portion of the institutions website.
I haven't even delved into Export sharpening. I've only used the 'capture sharpening' aspect of LR5 and then sharpened in old standby Photokit Sharpener.
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You know Lr sharpening is based on Photokit's principles (code), so you have the same capture / creative / output concepts. Just export a variety of images with different levels of sharpening, and make sure you export them at sizes at which you think they will be displayed. For similar multi-use tasks, I'd generally supply separate JPEGs for each use - and cross my fingers that someone uses the right ones ;)
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Prepping some images for Web use and wondering what kind of scheme you guys are using for web-bound images?
http://creativepro.com/out-of-gamut-thoughts-a-sharpening-workflow/
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Andrew
your link has an error and needs to be corrected - remove the double http
regards
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Hi Folks,
Prepping some images for Web use and wondering what kind of scheme you guys are using for web-bound images?
Do you add a bit of sharpening in the Develop module and then, when converting images to Jpeg, select "sharpen for screen" in the given doses?
Is there a better way to zone in on what you want?
I'm in Lightroom 5
Thanks.
I have an external simple viewing app (Preview in Mac OS) immediately open the downsized for web jpeg to check my LR export output sharpening settings which can vary (Glossy Paper Low, Standard or High, rarely use Screen settings) according to the distance of the subject in the image and fineness of detail like say a landscape vs macro shots of insects and flowers. Resolution of source image will affect results as well.
It's the fastest and simplest way since LR previews don't show exactly what downsizing will do to image edge detail.
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I use Tony Kuyper's web sharpening actions that come with his luminosity panel & find them excellent. I often tone them down slightly (via layer opacity) depending on the image and how far it has been downsized.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0RTYpIbJSI
Jon
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Hi Folks,
Prepping some images for Web use and wondering what kind of scheme you guys are using for web-bound images?
Do you add a bit of sharpening in the Develop module and then, when converting images to Jpeg, select "sharpen for screen" in the given doses?
Is there a better way to zone in on what you want?
I'm in Lightroom 5
Thanks.
I sharpen in detail panel in Lightroom with the following parameters as default up to f/11: 50/0.8/70/30 and f/16: 50/1.0/100/30. That is for high frequency detail like landscapes etc.
In export via publish or straight export I use sharpen for screen with the standard option. I haven't seen any reason to do more than that.
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The sharpening in Develop is not related to web use, but is about correcting the softness of the raw file. Apply it on that basis.
You then apply export sharpening. One key for web use is to export images at exactly the dimensions at which they will be used on the web, and apply LR export sharpening. This means you can review the JPEGs and see exactly how the sharpening affects them. However, how they will be used on the web can vary and some web applications will apply sharpening, in which case you might not even want to sharpen in export. You may want to explain a bit more detail about what you're doing - eg building a static web site or uploading full res images which will be resized by the server.
Hi John
Don't suppose you know if Squarespace will automatically apply sharpening. On their advice page ( https://support.squarespace.com/hc/en-us/articles/206542517 ) they state that they will automatically resize the image to seven different sizes. Should I apply output sharpening to the 1500px wide images that I upload? ( Maybe I'll use 2500px width ).
Graeme