I have been hearing good things about this plug-in/standalone noise reduction package from Topaz. If you have the previous DeNoise 6 plug-in, the upgrade to DeNoise AI is free. This is a slow but pretty impressive package for processing high ISO images or images that have had their shadows lightened significantly. Attached is a side-by-side compare of a tiny 100% crop of a larger image of water reflections. It does a nice job of filtering out the speckle and chroma noise while leaving the underlying image detail more or less intact. DeNoise AI is slow, but usually gets good results although it may work better on some images than others.
The next release of PWP 8 adds support for this plug-in.
Topaz DeNoise AI
Moderator: jsachs
Topaz DeNoise AI
- Attachments
-
- Full Image
- Full Image.jpg (78.86 KiB) Viewed 3395 times
-
- Compare 100% Crops
- Denoise AI.jpg (48.55 KiB) Viewed 3397 times
Jonathan Sachs
Digital Light & Color
Digital Light & Color
-
- Posts: 240
- Joined: June 18th, 2010, 4:27 pm
- What is the make/model of your primary camera?: Pentax K1
Re: Topaz DeNoise AI
Does anyone have experiences how Topaz DeNoise AI performes compared to DXO Prime or NIK Dfine 2?
I guess DXO Prime works just with RAW.
I guess DXO Prime works just with RAW.
Winfried
-----
migrated to Windows 10 in Nov. 2019
PWP Pro 64
CUDA not available
-----
migrated to Windows 10 in Nov. 2019
PWP Pro 64
CUDA not available
Re: Topaz DeNoise AI
I just tried using all three using their default settings on the same very noisy image - not a scientific test by any means. The original was shot at ISO 2000 and the exposure increased by 3 stops using DxO PhotoLab.
Both DxO Prime and DeNoise AI produced very similar results. Dfine 2 was much worse. Since each noise reduction method has settings you can adjust, it is possible the rankings would be different if you were willing to spend time fiddling with the controls.
DxO can open and apply noise reduction to TIFF or JPEG files, although I believe you probably get slightly better results starting with RAW files.
You can see the comparison at http://www.dl-c.com/Images/Noise%20Reduction.jpg
Both DxO Prime and DeNoise AI produced very similar results. Dfine 2 was much worse. Since each noise reduction method has settings you can adjust, it is possible the rankings would be different if you were willing to spend time fiddling with the controls.
DxO can open and apply noise reduction to TIFF or JPEG files, although I believe you probably get slightly better results starting with RAW files.
You can see the comparison at http://www.dl-c.com/Images/Noise%20Reduction.jpg
Jonathan Sachs
Digital Light & Color
Digital Light & Color
Re: Topaz DeNoise AI
Sharpen AI should be relatively easy to add.
Jonathan Sachs
Digital Light & Color
Digital Light & Color