![]() When I downloaded and opened your example, I noticed immediately that the girl's elbow had become the focal point in the image and her face and hair had become fuzzy. I would take more time, however I want to show that it can be a quick process if needed and I'm a little rushed for time myself :).įirst, for any image that has noise or jpeg artifacts, the best results will be seen if it is run through DeNoise or DeJPEG first (I chose not to here for time constraints.but usually I would have). I played around with your Santa girl for a minute, and I've attached what I was able to achieve in about 5 minutes. Also be sure to check out our new workflow tips and tricks: Thanks so much for your interest in writing about InFocus, and I hope I can provide you with some information that will be helpful. Here was Nichole Paschal of Topaz Labs response: ![]() I went through the getting started guide and just didn’t get it, so I sent Topaz Labs a copy of my shot and asked them to prove to me that this wasn’t yet another piece of junk software making a claim that it couldn’t live up to. Now when I first used InFocus to try to save the photo above it didn’t seem to work for me. Now this blog is no stranger to the concept of saving bad photos as my review of Focus Magic (not recommended), and Nik Software’s Sharpener Pro have both taken on this problem with Sharpener Pro being the incumbent winner for this problem – until now. However, what do you do if your blurry shot is a good shot that you wanted wish you could save (i.e., baby’s first smile, the photo you took of your spouse at an overseas landmark you’ll never visit again, etc…)? Well that’s where Topaz Software’s InFocus comes in! The purpose of InFocus is to try to save that shot you’d otherwise trash. When it happens with a good shot it is even more annoying, so what do you do? Well, if you are lucky and have taken multiple frames then maybe you have a decent shot that you can edit and you can toss the blurry shot. Your camera’s auto focus hits the wrong spot and the result is something like the shot above - a nice sharp elbow with much of the rest horribly out of focus. ![]() ![]() It happens to everyone – even Top Photographers – at some point. Your mother warned you this would happen… :-) ![]()
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