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Focus Magic's hidden strength is its ability to sharpen images that are
already in focus.
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technofile
Al Fasoldt's reviews and commentaries, continuously available online since 1983
T e c h n o f i l e
New version of Focus Magic enhances photos even better than before
May 18, 2003
By Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, The Post-Standard
If your digital photos are fuzzy or out of focus, don't give up. Use a
little magic.
That's what I've been doing over the last few weeks. I've been trying out
two magical image-enhancers. I'll tell you about them this week and next.
The first and most exciting is the latest version of one of my favorite
programs, Focus Magic, from www.focusmagic.com. It miraculously turns those
goofy out-of-focus pictures you took at the family reunion into images you
could hang at the Louvre. The latest version of Focus Magic is vastly
improved over the older one -- it's easier to use and figures the proper
settings out for you, so all you have to do is click once to rescue your
masterpiece.
Focus Magic runs only under Windows. There is no Mac version yet.
I've been running the beta version of Focus Magic. I've used the previous
program, version 1.23, for many months with great satisfaction, but I wasn't
prepared for the dramatic improvement in the current version. It does
everything for you except make you a cup of coffee.
Photo of Joe, the author's Yellow-Naped Amazon parrot, shown before
(left) and after (right) treatment by Focus Magic. Notice how everything in the image seems sharper.
There's no work at all when you fix your blurry images. Focus Magic spends a
few seconds examining the image, then tells you how much blur correction it
thinks the image needs. It even changes its settings to match the blur
factor. All you do is click on a "green light" in the toolbar.
Focus Magic's hidden strength is its ability to sharpen images that are
already in focus. In my example photo here, I've used Focus Magic to sharpen
a picture I took of our parrot, Joe. You can see the amazing improvement in
clarity by looking at his eye. The standard method of sharpening, called
unsharp mask, cannot make such an improvement.
I'm an unqualified fan of Focus Magic. In addition to the now-you-see-it,
now-you-don't way it gets rid of blur, Focus Magic also has a separate
function that enlarges images without making them blocky and ugly. If you do
a lot of resizing -- especially if you have to enlarge some of your photos
to get them to print better -- you need Focus Magic more than you might
realize. The method Focus Magic uses to resize images without telltale
jaggies makes other methods, such as the built-in image resizing in both
Photoshop and Photoshop Elements, look like amateur night at the programming
office.
But you need to know that Focus Magic is very, very slow. If you work on
truly large images the way I do -- mine tend to be 2,000 to 4,000 pixels
wide -- you'll find Focus Magic is an ideal excuse to make a sandwich, drive
to Topeka or take a nap. Processing a single large photo can take a few
hours unless you have a fast computer. You can always do other tasks while
it's working, of course, but you won't be able to use Focus Magic to fix up
a panorama three minutes before that important meeting.
Another problem: The standalone version of Focus Magic is brain-dead when
dealing with non-JPEG images. It can't load or save any other kind of image.
But the plug-in automatically installed with Focus Magic does not have that
JPEG limitation.
This version of Focus Magic will cost $89 starting June 1, but it's only $39
now. Get the free trial version from www.focusmagic.com, then buy it if you
like it. (Support this kind of excellence. It matters more than wee usually
think.)
Here's a tip: Buy version 1.23 and install it, then download the much
improved beta version and install that. Your registration will work with the
beta version also.
Next: Resize Magic's special touch.
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