Skip to main content

Tutorial explains how to keep clean edges when sharpening images in Photoshop

How To Sharpen Photos Cleanly in Photoshop Without White Edging
Sharpening an image in Photoshop seems fairly straightforward. With an image open, go up to the filter options, choose a sharpening method, and dial it in to your liking. The problem with these methods is that they tend to leave unwanted artifacts in the form of a white border around areas where contrast and color differ greatly.

Tired of this unwanted artifact, photographer and Photoshop guru Jimmy McIntyre created a specialized method of sharpening the vastly reduces that white border that often results from sharpening a full-size image. Now, he’s shared his method in the form of a helpful YouTube tutorial.

In the seven minute video, McIntyre first explains what the white border artifact is, as a baseline for comparison. After detailing the less-desired method of sharpening, he shows how to sharpen an image without it using a free-to-download Photoshop action he created.

If you aren’t a fan of actions or simply want to tweak his method a little more, McIntyre also shows how you can replicate his method from beginning to end without the action. Even for someone as familiar with Photoshop as myself, the method seems slightly convoluted, but it’s hard to argue with the results.

The basic premise behind his method is that by removing the sharpening effect at the very edges of high-contrast objects in the scene with the help of a mask, you can bring out the details of an image without destroying the areas of the image that should stay slightly softer.

It’s a great tutorial, and although he promotes his own Photoshop tool Raya Pro, it’s still worth watching and taking in since you don’t specifically need the tool to achieve the effect.

Try out the method for yourself and head on over to McIntyre’s YouTube Channel for more helpful Photoshop tutorials.

You can now Photoshop someone out of an image with one click
adobe photoshop lightroom june 2020 updates select subject copy

Adobe Photoshop’s artificial intelligence can now handle one of the most time-consuming manual editing tasks: Creating a mask around hair. In a major update across its entire photo and video ecosystem, Adobe announced a bevy of new features, including smarter selections in Photoshop, a new local hue tool in Lightroom, and a Lightroom-esque overhaul for Adobe Camera RAW.

Photoshop’s Select Subject tool isn't new, but today's update will make it much more useful to anyone working with photos of people. The tool uses A.I. to automatically select and mask the subject of the photograph, but previous implementations fell short when it came to complex selections -- like hair. That’s changing, Adobe says, with an update to the algorithm that allows Select Subject to first recognize what that subject is and refine its selection based on that context. When a person is detected, additional algorithms are used specifically to mask out the subject’s hair.

Read more
Check out the results when 1,000 photographers edit the same image
photo challenge asks photographers to edit the same image editing

Landscape photographer and YouTuber Nigel Danson recently asked his fellow photographers to try their hand at editing some of his own images.

The Brit was interested in seeing how different people would tackle the same task as each person went about showing off their unique editing styles through his work.

Read more
How to create a layer mask in Photoshop
Close up of Adobe Photoshop app icon being chosen from among other Adobe apps on a laptop screen.

If you’ve used Photoshop for image-editing, you know that the popular program can sometimes be a little intimidating for newcomers. One of the advanced, but vital tools you’ll need to get to grips with eventually is the humble layer mask. This feature allows you to alter small parts of an image, leaving other parts untouched.

In this guide, we explain all of the steps you need to follow to create a layer mask. Once you know how to create a layer mask, you can edit small parts of your images without having to change the entire thing.
What is a Photoshop layer mask?
A layer mask makes a portion of that layer invisible, revealing the layers underneath, while keeping other parts of the layer intact. Unlike making a selection to copy and paste into a new layer, a layer mask allows you to go back and make adjustments to what’s included in the selection (and what’s not included) at any point in the editing process.

Read more