Hi all,
I'm not sure if it has been mentioned before in the forums, but I thought I'd point it out anyway, because this setting could give oversharpen/unwanted results.
In previous editions of Photoshop it was possible to resize your photos with the setting "Bicubic Sharper", in the Image Size window. Standard, this was set to "Bicubic", in that way it didn't touch the sharpness.
Since CS6 there is a new setting, called "Bicubic Automatic". This setting will automatically use "Bicubic Sharper" when you're downsizing. When upsizing it'll use the "Smoother" setting.
To keep things in your own controls, like you were used to, I suggest you choose the classic "Bicubic" option in the General preferences pane.
Happy editing! - Simon De Rudder
I'm not sure if it has been mentioned before in the forums, but I thought I'd point it out anyway, because this setting could give oversharpen/unwanted results.
In previous editions of Photoshop it was possible to resize your photos with the setting "Bicubic Sharper", in the Image Size window. Standard, this was set to "Bicubic", in that way it didn't touch the sharpness.
Since CS6 there is a new setting, called "Bicubic Automatic". This setting will automatically use "Bicubic Sharper" when you're downsizing. When upsizing it'll use the "Smoother" setting.
To keep things in your own controls, like you were used to, I suggest you choose the classic "Bicubic" option in the General preferences pane.
Happy editing! - Simon De Rudder
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