Page 3 of 19
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T13:24:26-07:00
by fmw42
To my eyes, not much obvious difference, except jinc4sharpest seems to have slightly less (red) color in the rocks on the left and the wood fence.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T13:24:53-07:00
by Bonzo
Thanks for the links Nicolas.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T13:44:22-07:00
by Bonzo
As you say fmw42 its hard to tell the difference; but there are differnces.
I would say Jinc3Sharpest.png looks the sharpest and the colours looked best in Jinc3Radius3.png although it seems a bit softer.
I do not know the more you look and which one you look at first makes me change my mind!
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T14:04:38-07:00
by NicolasRobidoux
Our psychovisual system is really strange: If you rapidly flip between two nearly identical images, watch out for
http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Visual_masking.
P.S. I was originally warned about this by Dr. Kirk Martinez, Dept. of Electronics and Computer Science, U. Southampton
http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/km/.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T15:13:32-07:00
by fmw42
Interesting article. Yes, I was alternating rapidly in my comparison. But jinc4sharpest looked more different in comparison to each of the others (to my viewing). That is not to say which one is best. I just thought it seemed to have slightly different coloration than the others.
I have a hard time seeing much difference in sharpness. I guess my eyes are not trained for that kind of subtle difference. Also I did not spend that much time looking. It was just a quick review of the images.
Is there some good way to look for sharpness differences?
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T16:21:33-07:00
by NicolasRobidoux
Maybe I need to use an image for which the differences are a bit more obvious. (The fly?)
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T16:38:33-07:00
by henrywho
NicolasRobidoux wrote:@Henry: Could you let me know if it's OK that I posted these images? If not, I'll remove them.
It is a sample photo I read from that website. So it's under their copyright. I think it is better to post the original URL and the processing command-lines, instead of the processed files.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T16:41:31-07:00
by henrywho
The colors in Jinc4Sharpest.png are completely wrong. What is the command you used?
I would categorize such coloration as a bug.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T17:33:29-07:00
by NicolasRobidoux
henrywho wrote:The colors in Jinc4Sharpest.png are completely wrong. What is the command you used?
I would categorize such coloration as a bug.
Code: Select all
magick original.jpg -colorspace RGB -filter Lanczos -define filter:lobes=4 -define filter:blur=0.88451002338585141 -distort Resize 640x427 -colorspace sRGB Jinc4Sharpest.png
The maximally sharpened Jinc Lanczos 4 is, in my limited testing, a very unusual scheme. So it could be that it sucks. Just in case, let me check that I get the same thing using defines.
P.S. No, the command was almost certainly right. So, Jinc Lanczos 4 maximally sharpened sucks? Or somehow there is a bug (unlikely).
P.S. When I have time I'll compile with the brand new debug check for negative weight sums
viewtopic.php?f=22&t=20960#p84795. It would not surprise me if this is what is going on.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T17:38:04-07:00
by NicolasRobidoux
henrywho wrote:It is a sample photo I read from that website. So it's their copyright.
Oops! I'll switch to
http://www.mediafire.com/?49ahiwm5ukfu6c9, which I'll resize to 1024x1536.
P.S. This is a really good test image. But without pixel peeping, it's really hard to see a difference between the "good" ImageMagick schemes.
P.S. 2 The differences are definitely not obvious if looking casually. The scheme which surprises me a lot, esp. in terms of tonal faithfulness, is (warning: selection bias) EWA RobidouxSharp. I expected the various Lanczoses to beat it hands down when downsampling, but no: It's not quite as sharp, but on the other hand it has comparatively insignificant halo, so it does not get as much perceptual sharpness by artificially raising acutance.
P.S. 3 I'll try to do a wider variety of schemes with this one.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T18:59:06-07:00
by NicolasRobidoux
fmw42 wrote:Is there some good way to look for sharpness differences?
Not really sure. I think that the following is reasonable if the differences are not made obvious by flickering:
Have a good look at an area of the original, so you know what's there.
Now, have a look at one of the downsizes. Alternating slowly between the downsize and the original, both viewed without resizing, possibly closing your eyes for a while or looking at the wall or at nothing in particular for a bit, try to figure what you can see in the downsize that's supposed to be there, and also what's not supposed to be there, or is missing.
Repeat the exercise, separately, with another downsize.
You may have to take notes and cycle through, because in the process you'll "learn". Iterate until convergence
---
I don't know much about doing psychovisual experiments
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T19:59:46-07:00
by henrywho
henrywho wrote:The colors in Jinc4Sharpest.png are completely wrong.
No such problem if I download the png file and view it from my harddisk. It's weird.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-13T22:18:54-07:00
by fmw42
henrywho wrote:henrywho wrote:The colors in Jinc4Sharpest.png are completely wrong.
No such problem if I download the png file and view it from my harddisk. It's weird.
Viewing may depend upon the viewing app and its interpretation of PNG rendering intent which has somewhat recently been changed to perceptual. Not sure if this is the issue or not.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-14T01:03:33-07:00
by Pictus
This topic is gold, thanks guys!
The backpack, I prefer the linear light version, but the windmill nobody likes the house bricks in the linear light version...
I am enjoying the sharpness of EWA Catrom, sadly it is not 100% moiré free as we can see in the backpack center strip and in the house wall.
Re: best downsampling method for DSLR photographs
Posted: 2012-05-14T01:30:26-07:00
by henrywho
Pictus wrote:I am enjoying the sharpness of EWA Catrom, sadly it is not 100% moiré free as we can see in the backpack center strip and in the house wall.
Any comment on EWA-Lagrange or EWA-SincSinc2?