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![]() On the left the Raw was treated with Lightroom’s current manual noise reduction tool compared with on the right the new AI-powered Denoise with an amount of 88. The image above was enlarged to 200% for these sectional enlargements. It works with raw files and DNGs but only those created by Bayer and Fujifilm X-Trans sensors so raws from mobile phones, TIFFs, JPEGs and previously edited DNGs won’t benefit. ![]() The masking tools have taken another significant step forward in v12.3 but here I will concentrate on testing its Denoise tool. They have gone from strength to strength with greater accuracy, more control and awesome detection skills. Naturally, as it’s available on subscription only, it is regularly updated and in recent times Adobe has focused its attention on Lightroom’s masking tools. It takes you all the way from import, cataloguing and keywording through to editing and finally to output. Ticking Create Stack and the processed DNG is automatically stacked in the Lightroom catalogue, otherwise it sits alongside the original Adobe Lightroom Denoise in detailĪdobe Lightroom is a workflow program par excellence and used by photographers and image creators the world over. Untick Denoise and you get raw details and the option of Super Resolution. With Denoise ticked you get Raw details ticked too. In this comparison, we took a selection of files – shot mostly at high ISOs from older and new cameras – and put them through the three programs with a particular emphasis on Adobe’s Denoise used in Lightroom – as that is the new kid on the block.ĭenoise sits in Lightroom’s Detail palette. This anomaly, finally, has been corrected by Adobe with its latest updates, Camera Raw 15.3 and Lightroom v12.3, and both have the new AI-powered Denoise function. We recently ran a full review of the latest Photoshop The manual noise reduction tool in the Detail palette of Lightroom was usable and better than nothing, but it lagged behind what was available, so many photographers resorted to paying extra for third-party solutions. ![]() However, it was perhaps strange that two of imaging’s most iconic programs, Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom Classic, were less capable when it came to dealing with noisy files. Denoise is a very welcome addition to Lightroom and in this test, it showed itself a very capable tool, a notable achievement given its first generation status, so it’s only likely to get better. ![]()
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