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4 answers

Yep, if its blurry at the time the shot is taken, there's not a whole lot you can do. You can apply some sharpening if its only slightly soft, but for the most part this just makes the photo look like a sharpened-blurry photo.

Tripods, monopods, or good handhold technique are where its at.

2007-11-04 14:06:37 · answer #1 · answered by Evan B 4 · 1 0

Nope. Once the image has been captured, there is no camera or software feature that can go back in time to add features that are not in the shot.

"fotoguy" offers a good suggestion, though. NEVER delete these "less than perfect" images. They might serve to create artistic effects, backgrounds, or cloneable features to be used in other images. Take a piece of that "unstable" image; use some of the filters in Photoshop to "swirl" and "bubble" and motion blur it in different directions. The result may be unrecognizable, but could be quite interesting.

I took a film image, once, of wine being poured into a glass. The negative had, somehow gotten scratched, right at the point the wine was splashing against the glass surface. I scanned it, and, in Photoshop, I exaggerated the splash with an extreme swirl effect, distorting the scratch to look like an extreme highlight of the splashing liquid. (I didn't USE that shot, but it was a very interesting "save.")

2007-11-05 08:17:35 · answer #2 · answered by Vince M 7 · 0 0

Gotta agree with Antoni and EvanB. Once its done, its pretty much done.

If it isnt too bad, and otherwise a usable pic, use some artistic rendering with filters to play with the pic, and use the blurryfuzzies to your advantage...

2007-11-04 15:01:51 · answer #3 · answered by photoguy_ryan 6 · 2 0

stabilize?? didint cover that at fotog school??

short answer if they are unstable now theres little you can do

get it right in camera - use a tripod

a

2007-11-04 14:00:58 · answer #4 · answered by Antoni 7 · 4 0

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