Thanks Kostas, Cotty, Boris.

The picture of the lady with the dog is the color rendering of this one in b&w:

http://photoblog.jbuhler.com/index.php?showimage=247

And regardless of how sharp it looks at 600 pixels, the focus is in
the lady, when I feel it should be on the dog. It does print
acceptably well at 11x14 inches, though.

Nothing too special for the sharpness: To resize the images, I do a
staggered sharp and resize process, always sharpening only the
lighness channel in lab color mode to avoid color artifacts. I have an
action that sharpens, resizes to 1200, sharpens, resizes to 900,
sharpens and resizes to 600. Never ever sharpen an image without
resizing it afterwards, or it will look artificially sharpened.

j


On 1/27/06, Boris Liberman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi!
>
> > Hello all,
> >
> > I started a new, color photoblog. I've always been kind of scared of
> > color photography. I still see most of my pictures in black and white,
> > but I will try to post color images at least once a week here:
> >
> > http://color.jbuhler.com
> >
> > Only two pictures there so far. Comments welcome.
> >
> > And yes, I know they are very saturated :)
> >
> > Thanks for looking,
>
> Juan, excellent stuff. And I don't find it too saturated. I think it is
> because I am used to very strong Israeli sun... Great job.
>
> Cotty's right - but do tell us - how do you accomplish such strong
> sharpness???
>
> Boris
>
>


--
Juan Buhler
http://www.jbuhler.com
photoblog at http://photoblog.jbuhler.com

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