Page 197 - Photoshop for Lightroom Users – Scott Kelby 2nd Edition
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enough to get a nice, crisp shot. The shot looks okay here, but when you zoom in (like I’ve done in the next step), you’ll see the blurring problem pretty
clearly.
Step Two:
Here’s the zoomed-in view, and you can really see the camera shake big time. Since the flowers aren’t moving, it’s pretty clear it was my fault—I didn’t
keep the camera steady enough for the lighting conditions. But, we can fix that. Go under the Filter menu, under Sharpen, and choose Shake Reduction (as
shown here).
Step Three:
When the dialog opens, it immediately begins analyzing the image, starting in the middle (where most blurring occurs) and searching outward. You’ll see a
little progress bar appear near the bottom of the small preview in the right side of the dialog (it’s called the Detail loupe). Once it’s done doing the math, it
shows you its automated blur correction and, as you can see here, it did a pretty amazing job of saving the shot. It’s not perfectly 100% sharp, but the
original was pretty much unusable. For most of us, this is all you’ll need to do: open the filter, let it do its thing, and you’re done.