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Hello everyone Ronnie here with RWiggin Photography Tips and Tricks. Today I want to show you
how to use the High Pass filter adds a little more detail to your photograph and the first
thing we want to do is create a duplicate layer and there are many ways to do that you
can select Control J on the keyboard I believe it is Command J on a MAC or you simply go
up here and hit image in the right hand corner and right click and click on duplicate layer
and you will notice it gives a default name of Background Copy and you can change that
if you want to or you could just leave at the default name and click OK and you with
notice up in the pane you got tow of the same images. The first thing we want to do click
on the Filter selection on the toolbar and go to other and you want to select high pass
now I usually select do the 1.0 pixel and just play with that and what you will see
is some the display here what your doing is adding more detail bump it up just a little
bit and you will start seeing that detail here and you will notice down below the grass
is showing a lot more detail and you click OK and now if you notice it didn't really
do much so what we want to do is come up here in the drop down and we want to select Overlay
and what I will do is just zoom in here so we can see some of the detail has been added.
What I'm going to do is turn that layer off you'll look at the grass area and took some
of the sharpness out of them and we open this one backup and now you will see the detail
come back into the picture. A great way of adding alot of detail to your photo. Now I'm
going to do this fit back to screen and what I do is go to layers flatten image and there
you go. So if you liked the video please select like button below and click subscribe