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JPEG compression artifacts. The highlights are also a bit overexposed.
Sandstone texture:
Exposure: blacks (left) are missing, also parts of the whites (right of the histogram). Normally, this should result in a picture with missing contrasts:
You have the painterly look of an over processed, small sensor picture. There are no fine structures left. I suppose that even your whites are missing on the histogram, that the light part of the picture has been clipped (overexposed).
As for JPEG artefacts, to bring them out clearly, I've magnified the picture to 800%. Th
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Well, this is a smartphone. But screenshot is just screenshot, and it is always not sharp, I don't want boring photo. And this is not boring, it is an example that you can grow them in the garden. On my computer is pretty sharp. Is it something happening after I am saving them. I really don't know what is going on.
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But screenshot is just screenshot, and it is always not sharp,
By @.....assa
A screenshot is sharp, if the picture is sharp on the screen!
@.....assa wrote:
Is it something happening after I am saving them.
No, after saving, you will have no modifications, it may be that during the save operation, depending on your parameters, you get the quality worse.
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Sandstone texture:
Exposure: blacks (left) are missing, also parts of the whites (right of the histogram). Normally, this should result in a picture with missing contrasts:
You have the painterly look of an over processed, small sensor picture. There are no fine structures left. I suppose that even your whites are missing on the histogram, that the light part of the picture has been clipped (overexposed).
As for JPEG artefacts, to bring them out clearly, I've magnified the picture to 800%. They are, however, visible also at lower magnification scales:
a) sharpening artefact
b) compression artefact—visible in the darker parts of the image
c) colour noise introduced by the JPEG compression. That is visible in all the light parts of the picture.
The most damaging effect of this picture is the painterly look, where the camera software has wiped out all fine structures.
Turf, …:
Disturbing patches of out of the focus elements:
They are all over the picture.
The painterly look is also visible here, your in camera optimization has optimized details away.
If you look at your histogram, you see that here too, the whites are missing.
The biggest defect here is certainly that the blades of grass are out of focus pretty much everywhere in the image. This makes the whole picture look blurry. This is followed by the painterly look of the details.
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I like this elements sorry, it gives pictures atmosphere.
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You can like them, but they are disturbing. And they will lead to a refusal, as far as I know. And sorry: they don't give atmosphere.
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Exposure: blacks (left) are missing, also parts of the whites (right of the histogram). Normally, this should result in a picture with missing contrasts:
this painterly look here happened after using JPG artefacts remover from neural filters.
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I am talking about Sandstone. Exposure: blacks (left) are missing, also parts of the whites (right of the histogram). Normally, this should result in a picture with missing contrasts:
Contrast was done first, that happen after neural filter's JPG artefact was added in post-production. Parts of the whites? Highlights? Are you seriously looking at your image in 800% where is this part what you point it out, I went through I can not see.
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Are you seriously looking at your image in 800% where is this part what you point it out, I went through I can not see.
By @.....assa
No, but I zoomed in to 800% to make the artefacts more visible. You see at 100% that something is not OK, at 200% you see that painterly look, depending on your screen resolution, you will see the artefacts also at 200%. The moderators didn't need to zoom in. They had a 10s look to check the asset and refused. They can refuse at the first error they encounter.
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 screenshot before Neural filters and removing JPG artefacts.
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Then the conclusion would be don't use the Neural filters! It gave a rubbish result.
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Yes I am trying to repair them, but they are claiming all is fine, it worked before now they don't.
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Anyway, thank you for the conversation and all advices.
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I can imagine that the structure of the sandstone looks like noise and artefacts to the neural filter.
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 screenshot before Neural filters and removing JPG artefacts.
By @.....assa
Much better!
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That's a nice source. Thanks.
For stock, you should cover the whole range, including the whites and the blacks, without clipping one or the other side.
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Everything is explained, very clear here. Thank you again for the conversation.
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You're welcome.
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