User talk:Eleeguy

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You asked:

I have a HP Scanjet 4850 and I run a Mac G4. My previous scanner had a feature that, when scanning photos from newspapers, would "blend" the print dots so the resulting scanned photo would be smooth rather than a bunch of various sized and shaded dots. I don't see how I can do that with this scanner. I have been frustrated by going to the HP site for help. Does anyone know if there is a way I can achieve this result. By the way, I usually scan into photoshop. (Eleeguy (talk) 15:12, 13 August 2008 (UTC))

  • [1] place the page to be scanned on the scanner at an angle, say 15° from vertical, and scan it into Photoshop
  • [2] apply a Gaussian blur filter (with a radius of 1-2 pixels: play around to see what looks best, and don't forget that you can use decimals like 1.2 pixels)
  • [3] use "Straighten Image" to, well, straighten the image
  • [4] crop it and save the result.

Obviously you lose a little detail when you apply the gaussian blur; but you can scan at a higher DPI initially to help offset this.

What you're doing is called "manual descreening" and if you do a Google search on "Photoshop manual descreening" you'll get lots of other "recipes". Basically:

  1. . scan at at least double your desired final resolution
  2. . apply a blur or despeckle filter
  3. . resample to the final resolution
  4. . use a sharpening filter (unsharp mask)
-- Nunh-huh 09:41, 14 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]