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> Gigapixel AI is available for $79.99 (regularly $99.99) through 11/6. It was shot with a Minolta DiMAGE S404 “popper”. This particular one, a photo of a scale model of an old hotel on display at the LA County Fair, is not bad, but it’s not DSLR-quality either. You know the drill on this blog: For my Gigapixel refinement examples, I dig back into my personal photo archive to find less-than-perfect, technically-challenged original images to enhance. The photo in my example below is a 2006-era, 4-megapixel image. Choose an Image Type that matches the type of photo you are working with, and finally, either Auto-detect or manually adjust noise and blur refinement settings. If a face is present in the photo you can test the results of using Face Refinement. Load your image(s), choose a degree of upsizing (0.5 – 6x) or manually input exact maximum width and height dimensions. Using Gigapixel AI couldn’t be any easier either.
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No more issues with buttons that do the same thing having different colors, and the entire UI has been made to look more appealing in general. This is a whole new look: Topaz has taken quite a bit of care to make the colors more consistent across the entire Gigapixel AI user interface.
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