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Blowup; Making BIG Pictures From Little Files
“Don’t let’s spoil everything, we’ve only just met.”—David Hemmings in Michelangelo Antonioni’s film Blow-Up Since back in the days when a 3-megapixel camera was as good as it got, making
big ones out of little ones has been a goal of digital photographers. Along
the way this desire to create big prints from small files led to the creation
of “something for nothing” software such as Genuine Fractals, BlowUp,
PhotoZoom Pro, and Enlarger PRO, as well as Photoshop’s own built-in scaling
capabilities. So how do they work? Are they any good? That’s what I decided
to find out.
That’s why Bicubic Smoother produces better results when increasing image size than the default Bicubic method. You should use Bicubic Sharper when reducing image size but it can sometimes produce an oversharpened image. If that happens (and that’s not the subject of this story) you should switch to the standard Bicubic interpolation. What Photoshop doesn’t offer is fractal interpolation that more accurately retains the shape of things with clean, sharp edges and less halos or blurring around the edges than bicubic interpolation.
Here are a couple of other software tools to help you make big prints from small files: BenVista’s (www.benvista.com) PhotoZoom Pro 2 uses a new S-Spline interpolation technique called S-Spline XL that allows image enlargements of your digital image files up to any size “without any loss of quality.” PhotoZoom Pro 2 is 40 percent faster than the previous version and is capable of rendering high image magnifications without the dreaded jaggies. New features include an improved user interface with additional cropping functionality, support for 48- and 64-bit images, and the ability to rotate, mirror/flip, and do batch conversions. It supports IPTC, EXIF, along with ICC profiles. PhotoZoom Pro 2 costs $149 and is available as a stand-alone application or Photoshop compatible plug-in.
Alien Skin Software’s (www.alienskin.com) BlowUp is an automation plug-in that works with Adobe’s Photoshop and Photoshop Elements. The aliens claim it offers the “highest quality image re-sizing available” and is better than Photoshop’s built-in bicubic interpolation. BlowUp preserves smooth, crisp edges and lines, and can produce four times (1600 percent) enlargements without jagged artifacts or halos. In some cases, BlowUp can enlarge up to six times (3600 percent) without obvious artifacts. BlowUp includes photo grain controls, enlargement-specific sharpening, and supports most image modes, including CMYK. It also supports 16- and 32-bit images and is optimized for multi-core and multi-processor computer systems.
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