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  2. Kuwahara filter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuwahara_filter

    The size of the window is chosen in advance and may vary depending on the desired level of blur in the final image. Bigger windows typically result in the creation of more abstract images whereas small windows produce images that retain their detail. Typically windows are chosen to be square with sides that have an odd number of pixels for ...

  3. Font hinting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Font_hinting

    Note the increased edge contrast with the hinted text but more faithful character shape and more natural inter-character spacing in the unhinted text. Font hinting , also known as instructing , is the use of mathematical instructions to adjust the display of an outline font so that it lines up with a rasterized grid.

  4. Comparison gallery of image scaling algorithms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_gallery_of...

    These produce sharp edges and maintain high level of detail. Unfortunately due to the standardized size of 218x80 pixels, the "Wiki" image cannot use HQ4x or 4xBRZ to better demonstrate the artifacts they may produce such as row shifting. The example images use HQ4x and HQ2x respectively.

  5. Adobe Photoshop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adobe_Photoshop

    Adobe Photoshop is a raster graphics editor developed and published by Adobe for Windows and macOS.It was created in 1987 by Thomas and John Knoll.It is the most used tool for professional digital art, especially in raster graphics editing, and its name has become genericised as a verb (e.g. "to photoshop an image", "photoshopping", and "photoshop contest") [7] although Adobe disapproves of ...

  6. Feathering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feathering

    Feathering is not only used on paintbrushes in computer graphics software. Feathering may also blend the edges of a selected feature into the background of the image. When composing an image from pieces of other images, feathering helps make added features look "in place" with the background image.

  7. Clipping path - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clipping_path

    Anything inside the path will be included after the clipping path is applied; anything outside the path will be omitted from the output. Applying the clipping path results in a hard (aliased) or soft (anti-aliased) edge, depending on the image editor's capabilities. Clipping path. By convention, the inside of the path is defined by its direction.

  8. Edge-preserving smoothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edge-preserving_smoothing

    Edge-preserving filters are designed to automatically limit the smoothing at “edges” in images measured, e.g., by high gradient magnitudes. For example, the motivation for anisotropic diffusion (also called nonuniform or variable conductance diffusion) is that a Gaussian smoothed image is a single time slice of the solution to the heat ...

  9. Jaggies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaggies

    This image was scaled up using nearest-neighbor interpolation.Thus, the "jaggies" on the edges of the symbols became more prominent. Jaggies are artifacts in raster images, most frequently from aliasing, [1] which in turn is often caused by non-linear mixing effects producing high-frequency components, or missing or poor anti-aliasing filtering prior to sampling.