Activity for Canina
Type | On... | Excerpt | Status | Date |
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Comment | Post #286510 |
If someone wants to look at the answer to judge this for themselves, and doesn't have [the Curate ability](/abilities/flag_curate) here, [the answer is available](https://web.archive.org/web/20220410021855/https://photography.codidact.com/posts/283205#answer-284278) for viewing courtesy of the Intern... (more) |
— | over 2 years ago |
Comment | Post #285598 |
For whatever that might be worth, not my downvote. (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #285598 |
@#36396 Indeed, but the text of the question made much more sense when read in the sense of flashlights, which is why I asked for clarification. (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #285598 |
OP has clarified that the question is about flashlights, not flashes. (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #285590 |
The answer posted 14:54 UTC seems to assume that you have different [camera flashes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_(photography)) that you want to compare, but I read the question as being that you have different [flashlights](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flashlight) that you want to compare. ... (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Edit | Post #281877 |
Post edited: |
— | over 3 years ago |
Edit | Post #281877 |
Post edited: |
— | over 3 years ago |
Edit | Post #281877 | Initial revision | — | over 3 years ago |
Question | — |
Apply unsharp mask before or after downsizing to final size? For sharpening photos out of a DSLR, where the final result will be at a lower size compared to the DSLR's output (for example, for publishing on the web), is it better to: apply (possibly slightly more) unsharp mask, then downsize? or downsize, then apply unsharp mask to taste at the final i... (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |
Edit | Post #277196 |
Post edited: |
— | over 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #277196 | Initial revision | — | over 4 years ago |
Answer | — |
A: How do I take crisp pictures of flames at night (with a cell phone)? There are likely at least two issues at play here. First, look at the other elements in the photo. The candelabra, the window behind it, the edge of the windowsill. All of those are fairly sharp, with much more well-defined edges than the candle flames. Blur to the flames due to camera motion ther... (more) |
— | over 4 years ago |