richard_l
Well-known
Why do people over sharpen in post processing? It looks bad, and it doesn't prove anything. I have a little P&S that takes razor sharp images, but it isn't my best camera by any means.
Why do people over sharpen in post processing? It looks bad, and it doesn't prove anything. I have a little P&S that takes razor sharp images, but it isn't my best camera by any means.
They over sharpen because they were never darkroom trained to know what a good print is supposed to look like.
Generally speaking, if one can tell photoshop is done , I will not like it.
There can be serious problems with cheap monitors also. Mine costs as much as a pro camera.
And Bokeh-at-all-cost is gone as well. Man, that was a fad that made me want to quit photography just so I wouldn't be part of the circus.
In our modern world everybody is bombarded with often striking visuals in commercials, ads, magazines, movies asf. asf. and most images are sharp with highly saturated colors asf. The normal viewer simply has become used to see images of with these qualities and to identify them as 'good images'.
Then there are those who look for something different. Often enough I have seen that an image is specially noted and celebrated just because it has colors that are or are made to look like 'old film' colors, are washed out, and there is little sharpness, pretty much regardless if it was a good photo otherwise.