But, those areas in (eg) the corners that look clipped, with a loss of detail, would kind of bug me. If the anti noise controls confuse you, and you don't want to take the time to learn them, (Big mistake, IMO), this will be very useful for you.Ĭlick on these photos to see bigger images.
Particularly, I suspect you have to be very stingy with using the "preserve detail" slider in AI DeNoise. I will play with it a bit more before I condemn it completely. But then I know what I'm doing in those tools. Both ACDSee and DeNoise 6 have that.įrankly, at this point, I think I prefer ACDSee or DeNoise 6 to AI DeNoise. That is really useful in controlling Luminance noise. I was also disappointed in not being able to view the image in a desaturated mode. Topaz recommends that you save in the DNG format if you need to adjust the brightness and tonality after denoise. With ACDSee and DeNoise 6, I am used to being able to adjust noise and 'lighting' separately. I was also disturbed by how it automatically adjusts brightness and tonality. You can turn the recalc off, at least for the sliders, but without knowing what you are doing turning that recalc off, will slow your learning process. I suspect it will be very popular because it DOES make noise control very easy.īut man, it is S S L L O O W W! Every change to a slider causes the program to recalculate how the photo looks, as does a save. plus all sorts of brightness and tonality controls. DeNoise 6 had lots of controls, from Color noise to Luminance, to RGB noise controls.
It's easy to use I'll grant you that, just 3 control sliders in its entirety. So I got it and did a quick comparison between it and my old standby ACDSee Ultimate 2019.
#DOES TOPAZ DENOISE 6 CANCEL OUT DENOISE 5 FOR FREE#
I got this for free since I already owned Topaz DeNoise 6.