is there a tendency to over-process images? - in general on this forum - (maybe I'm noticing this with images of birds)
or is it that digital is now producing 40mbte images, (which have their on "style"), as normal, obviously scaled down when posted on here
what do you think?
I'll wade into this, as I "think" several things might be happening with bird photographs.
Digital has revolutionised bird photography, with high resolution sensors encouraging massive amounts of cropping into small images of birds far far away. Add to this, software that can work magic in reducing noise, enhancing sharpness and cutting through haze, and I think it's adding up to a recipe for poor quality bird photographs.
First, in relying on long lenses and extreme cropping, you are allowing the light coming from the subject to pass through large amounts of atmosphere before it reaches the sensor. So regardless of your sensor resolution or the optical quality of the lens, you can still end up with a poor quality, "low detail", degraded tonal and colour quality, starting point.
Second, despite them being useful tools, AI denoising or sharpening plus dehaze, can wreak havoc with image quality, especially if you have a low-quality starting point that you are trying to recover.
While these AI tools (and dehaze) can work astonishingly well, they still need to be applied with care, and still work best with images that start out being good quality. e.g a noisy but still bitingly sharp image will give a much better starting point for AI denoising than one with less sharpness and similar noise levels.
The defaults found on this type of software, often seem to be set far too high, which, while giving an initial amazing improvement over the original, look way over the top on closer inspection. Even turning down the defaults can still give artificial (overprocessed?) looks when critically, or even casually, inspected.
Personally, I'm becoming less and less enamoured with this AI stuff, and while I am still using it, I am also becoming more and more discerning about the when and how.
On a related AI aside, I've heard a couple of professional retouchers bemoan the fact that current job applicants seem to only know about AI masking, when the expectation is that they have the manual skills to use the pen tool, because AI masks cannot match the quality of those made with the pen tool,
And related to the above is from Paul Reiffers Capture One tutorials, where tutees seem to have dramatically increased their use of masking since Capture One introduced AI masking, but almost always, all they have done is click the AI tool and not realised how much work was still required to turn the AI results into a good mask.