Quieting Noise; Digital Noise Is Easily Controlled With These Plug-In Filters Page 3
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When using presets, Noiseware often produced images that were too plastic
or that needed some touching up afterward. However, the plastic factor could
be dealt with easily enough by modifying the helpful presets--the Landscape
preset proved especially handy. Still, all those sliders? I recommend that you
don't click those tabs unless you really, really have to. Having said
that, Noiseware was my first NR plug-in and remains a sentimental favorite.
Dfine did a competent job when set to Automatic mode, but I found that dealing
with control points could be hit or miss--you really have to target every
conceivable area to do a good job, and even then it did poorly with heavy color
noise. And it was slow, compared to the other plug-ins. Neat Image produced
the poorest results, with images that were either too plastic or simply not
corrected to my satisfaction. The small window was also a hindrance. But, at
the end of the day, I'd be very happy working with any of these plug-ins.
In saving time and effort, each is a marked improvement over what an image editor
can do alone.
In Camera Noise Reduction (NR)
Good news. The camera may provide an effective means of dealing with long exposure
(fixed-pattern) noise. Long exposure NR is a camera function that utilizes the
principle of "dark frame subtraction." Essentially, the camera makes
two exposures at the same shutter speed and f/stop, except that the second exposure
is a dark frame with no image--except for hot pixels. These hot pixels
tend to burn through the image, similar, in a sense, to the spots you see after
glimpsing a bright light source, except that they don't simply fade away
over time. Specially formulated algorithms are brought to bear in precisely
layering and blending the two images so as to subtract the noise, which is the
one common element shared by the two exposures. (For those of you with cameras
that don't offer this feature, dark frame subtraction can also be performed
manually in post--but as a somewhat laborious procedure. Details can be
found in the online references listed later).
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Good and bad. High ISO NR is another digital camera function accessed through the menu, but this one is designed to deal with noise associated with high ISO values. But I found its effect to be negligible (at least when tested on the Nikon D300 at the maximum NR setting).
Additional Resources Online
Do an online search for "digital noise" and, if your camera doesn't
offer long exposure NR, also search "dark frame subtraction." Many
of the site names were too complex to list, but here are two for starters: www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/noise.htm
and www.photo.net/learn/dark_noise.
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