Water Heater User Manual

Table Of Contents
ADOBE FIREWORKS CS3
User Guide
82
Original; after sharpening
To sharpen an image using a sharpen option:
1
Select the image.
2 Do one of the following to select a sharpen option:
In the Property inspector, click the Add Live Filters button, and then select Sharpen > Sharpen or Sharpen More
from the Filters pop-up menu.
Select Filters > Sharpen > Sharpen or Sharpen More.
Note: Applying a filter from the Filters menu is destructive; that is, it cannot be undone except when Edit > Undo is an
option. To maintain the ability to adjust, turn off, or remove this filter, apply it as a Live Filter, as described in the first
bulleted option in this step. For more information, see “Using Live Filters” on page 147.
To sharpen an image using Unsharp Mask:
1 Select the image.
2 Do one of the following to open the Unsharp Mask dialog box:
In the Property inspector, click the Add Live Filters button, and then select Sharpen > Unsharp Mask from the
Filters pop-up menu.
Select Filters > Sharpen > Unsharp Mask.
Note: Applying a filter from the Filters menu is destructive; that is, it cannot be undone except when Edit > Undo is an
option. To maintain the ability to adjust, turn off, or remove this filter, apply it as a Live Filter, as described in the first
bulleted option in this step. For more information, see “Using Live Filters” on page 147.
3 Drag the Sharpen Amount slider to select the amount of sharpening effect from 1% to 500%.
4 Drag the Pixel Radius slider to select a radius from 0.1 to 250.
An increase in radius results in a greater area of sharp contrast surrounding each pixel edge.
5 Drag the Threshold slider to select a threshold of 0 to 255.
Values between 2 and 25 are most commonly used. An increase in threshold sharpens only those pixels of a higher
contrast in the image. A decrease in threshold includes pixels of lower contrast. A threshold of 0 sharpens all pixels
in the image.
6 Click OK.