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Ai gigapixel review
Ai gigapixel review












This too is subjective, and so the two continue to function equally well.

ai gigapixel review

There is very little color variation between the two, however, because Gigapixel’s output was sharpened more, the blades do have some added brightness in their definition. Getting into the details of the fine blades of Icelandic grass on the dunes, we also see that both filters performed well, with Photoshop’s output sharpness slightly less than that of Gigapixel AI’s. Let’s take a closer look at some other portions of the photo. So far, the two are performing equally well! Other positive points worth mentioning: It does not appear that either filter magnified the chromatic aberrations on the photographer any more than the other, which can often happen with enlargements. NOTE: I left all of these images unsharpened for comparison. If you’re looking to achieve an identical level of sharpness with Preserve Details 2, applying the most basic sharpening filter in Photoshop seems to do the trick. The first thing immediately noticeable is that Gigapixel AI tends to sharpen the final image more than Photoshop does. You’ll see several examples of the two here, and it feels “over sharpened” in my opinion, but that is largely subjective. Let’s compare the output of these two products. I then ran the photo through both Topaz Gigapixel AI and Adobe Photoshop’s “Preserve Details 2.0″ to produce two 24×48” images (2x), then saved each jpeg at maximum quality, which is what I would normally send to the printer.

ai gigapixel review

I renamed my image to “The Other Photographer” to avoid accidentally overwriting anything. If I did any minor resampling, I don’t recall, but I typically only resample before emitting a print jpeg, and so when working with the original Photoshop file, none of my images should ever be resampled. This print currently lives on my wall as a 12×24, which is probably the native resolution after cropping. I took this photo, “The Photographer” on a trip to Iceland in 2015, at the popular black sand dunes in Stokksnes overlooking the Vestrahorn mountain range, using a Nikon D810 and a Zeiss 35mm f/1.4 at f/5.6. Given how much Topaz products have been hyped lately, it seemed like a worthy endeavor to compare Gigapixel AI to Photoshop’s “Preserve Details 2.0” upscaler. I have several 2:1 cropped photos with a native-ish resolution of 12×24″, and wanted to see if Gigapixel was up to the task of handling a 24×48″ enlargement. I purchased Topaz Gigapixel AI as part of a bundle last year, but haven’t had much need to do enlargements until recently.

ai gigapixel review

Adobe Photoshop by Jonathan Zdziarski (click on images for larger view):














Ai gigapixel review