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fireattack said: Uh, i will write more details maybe tomorrow but as a start, you need to resize it. 600dpi is too high for filtering since almost no images have that high DPI when printing. And always be careful about sharpening - I'd say the raw is already over-sharpened.
Wow it looked amazing! Also, where did you get the raw from? Was it from the original one that was uploaded? Anyways, so I should resize it first and then use filters? I was somehow thinking of using filters first and then resize but that would make no sense right? Regarding sharpening, I looked at the raw but it does not seem to have been processed at all so I'm confused about this point since I don't think there was any sharpening applied to it. But I think you are right since I think I might need to lessen the sharpening a bit.
For clarifications on DPI. What you meant is that when you scan a picture, you want as much details as you can get. For example, an image that is created on a computer 100x100 is then printed. You scanned the printed version at 600 dpi which would get as much detail from the printed image as possible. As a result, the scanned image in the computer would be possibly bigger than the original source. Therefore you would then resize it down a bit so that it's back to its "proper size"?
Enternal
For clarifications on DPI. What you meant is that when you scan a picture, you want as much details as you can get. For example, an image that is created on a computer 100x100 is then printed. You scanned the printed version at 600 dpi which would get as much detail from the printed image as possible. As a result, the scanned image in the computer would be possibly bigger than the original source. Therefore you would then resize it down a bit so that it's back to its "proper size"?