![]() ![]() Clarity and Texture, also most likely will make it more difficult for DeNoise to effectively remove the noise. Of those you have listed the only two I can think of which might cause some trouble would be vibrance and saturation. Editing exposure before DeNoise, I sometimes find can actually help with the noise removal, by exposing some noise in the darker areas, so it is visible to DeNoise. I understand wanting to keep the benefit of the raw file and you can do that by saving your DeNoise image file as a TIF/TIFF for example. DeNoise may be able to still remove the noise after some of those procedures, but you are making it harder for the software to do its job, and therefore it may not be able to do it as well as it could if it was used first. Hi Julian, it is recommended that you remove the noise in your images before you do other adjustments because those adjustments can also adjust the noise. I’m just still unclear about how early exactly I should be applying Denoise or just how much I can do before I should Denoise. I can appreciate that doing any sharpening could affect Denoise so I’m not doing that until afterwards. Is that correct to wait with those edits after Denoise? Or can I apply clarity, texture, adjustment brushes before Denoise when I have the benefit of the raw file? What do the experts advise? I also wait to apply anything in HSL or do any gradient/radial/adjustment brush work - until after I have applied Denoise. ![]() But it’s how far I can go with my initial edits that is puzzling me.įor example, with the raw file ( before Denoise) I might edit exposure, white balance, highlights, shadows, white point, black point, vibrance and saturation.īut I don’t do anything that comes close to sharpening - meaning I don’t apply sharpening, clarity, dehaze or texture. After some initial edits, I use the plugin to apply Denoise and save it as a TIF file to carry on with my workflow. I use Lightroom Classic to edit my raw files. I understand that but I want to get more specific and am looking for some expert advice, please. I read somewhere that Denoise should be applied early on in the workflow. But there’s something I’ve never been quite sure of. I’ve been using Denoise AI for some time and it’s been great. ![]()
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