3. The last of the first 3 adjustments is Saturation. This photo was definitely lacking in color, so I chose to make the saturation more colorful. The shed behind the bushes begins to pick up brown tones while the bush gains a little color although on the blue/green shade.
3. 
4. Deinterlace does refer to the problem lines from screen captures, but I noticed that it seemed to help this photo remove some odd tints of color. I tested removing Odd and Even lines, and the Odd worked the best.
4. 
5 & 6. To JPEG or Moiré remove, that is that question. And how much? It may be easier to think in terms of sharpen and soften. The JPEG will sharpen the image, the Moiré will soften. In the terms on page 1, it was explained a bit more technically. You have to be careful and select in using these two functions. Moiré was not useful at all for this image since so much was out of focus from the conditions under which the photo was taken. And to use too strong a JPEG removal would be to add too much grain to the image. I finally settled on Low at a strength of 50.
5/6. 
7. I tried the Scratch Removal, and it just wasn't going to work on this photo. Even on the lowest settings it was removing lines from the trellis.
8. On to Clarify. It also has to be tested at different strengths. Too much will add too much grain to the image. You have to decide how much grain you are willing to deal with in order to show the clearest image. There are times when grain actually adds interesting detail to an image. I used a strength of 2 on mine, but you may want to go higher when you are doing your image.
8. 
9. Fade Correction can work wonders! With the double view window, you can test various amounts until you see one that looks the best. I ended up using 25.
9.
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