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nealeh
Inspiring
March 8, 2014

Pixelation occurs when an image is being viewed at too high a magnification or has been too greatly enlarged.

Show us the original picture at it's full resolution (you may need to put it on a photo sharing site if it's too large for a forum post), explain what you are trying to do and we may be able to give better advice.

Some general suggestion though if you want to try for yourself (work on a copy of the image, or just duplicate the background layer and work on the duplicate) include, Sharpen, Gaussian Blur, Noise Filters (try Despeckle), increasing resolution during a resize operation, varying the resizing algorithms.

Cheers,
--
Neale
Insanity is hereditary, you get it from your children

If this post or another user's post resolves the original issue, please mark the posts as correct and/or helpful accordingly. This helps other users with similar trouble get answers to their questions quicker. Thanks.

Participant
March 10, 2014

Hello;

Attached is a cropped copy of the original picture. The more I try to enhance the color, contrast and the lighting the

Pixelated it gets, especially the horse running behind. I set the ISO at 80. Isn’t true that the lower the ISO, the higher

The quality? I hope you can find a solution.

Thank you

Nili

nealeh
Inspiring
March 10, 2014

You can't send images by e-mail, you must visit the forum with a web browser to post your reply at http://forums.adobe.com/thread/1423287?tstart=30 and add the the image.

Cheers,
--
Neale
Insanity is hereditary, you get it from your children

If this post or another user's post resolves the original issue, please mark the posts as correct and/or helpful accordingly. This helps other users with similar trouble get answers to their questions quicker. Thanks.