Noise Ninja Plug-in for Photoshop Makes Noisy Images Quiet
When I upgraded to a Canon Rebel XTi from my wee Sony DSC-P93 I was overjoyed. I had a camera that would do what I wanted, no stop-gap measure between my old SLR and a DSLR. After shooting some low-light images at 1600 ISO I was faced with the harsh realities
of life in the digital imaging world: Noise.
Remember film cameras? Using high ISO films, like ISO 800, could result in grainy prints. Noise is the digital world's equivalent of film grain, and is seen as ugly specks or color spots in your digital images. There are many technical causes, involving your camera's sensor and amplification circuits. Noise is a fact of life, of physics, that cannot be changed.
Or can it?
I thought I had captured a great silhouetted night shot. Viewing it on the camera's LCD preview I was stunned. In my office, on the computer, it was a different story. The image was as noisy as a kindergarten class. I tried every Photoshop trick I knew to rescue the image. All I managed to do was make it blurry, not what I had in mind.
After reading a forum post on photo.net I downloaded a copy of PictureCode's Noise Ninja, a Photoshop plug-in or standalone program, for both Windows and Mac OSX.
According to the Austin, Texas-based PictureCode, most noise reduction tools aren't very effective, removing little noise, destroying fine detail, and making the user do a lot of work. Noise Ninja uses Wavelet Theory, a new mathematical approach to noise reduction. This theory converts image pixels into spatial representations which allows the software to remove noise from different locations, frequencies and color channels. Noise Ninja can automatically identify noise and with user input, quickly remove it.
I didn't think there was much that could be done to rescue my noisy image. In vain, I decided to give Noise Ninja's downloadable demo plug-in a try. The installation was easy. I opened my image in Photoshop CS2 and selected the Noise Ninja plug-in from the filter menu.
I used the automatic settings and was amazed with the results. The digital noise in the image disappeared, like magic. My photograph was a work of art, unmarred by evil noise.
Remember film cameras? Using high ISO films, like ISO 800, could result in grainy prints. Noise is the digital world's equivalent of film grain, and is seen as ugly specks or color spots in your digital images. There are many technical causes, involving your camera's sensor and amplification circuits. Noise is a fact of life, of physics, that cannot be changed.
Or can it?
I thought I had captured a great silhouetted night shot. Viewing it on the camera's LCD preview I was stunned. In my office, on the computer, it was a different story. The image was as noisy as a kindergarten class. I tried every Photoshop trick I knew to rescue the image. All I managed to do was make it blurry, not what I had in mind.
After reading a forum post on photo.net I downloaded a copy of PictureCode's Noise Ninja, a Photoshop plug-in or standalone program, for both Windows and Mac OSX.
According to the Austin, Texas-based PictureCode, most noise reduction tools aren't very effective, removing little noise, destroying fine detail, and making the user do a lot of work. Noise Ninja uses Wavelet Theory, a new mathematical approach to noise reduction. This theory converts image pixels into spatial representations which allows the software to remove noise from different locations, frequencies and color channels. Noise Ninja can automatically identify noise and with user input, quickly remove it.
I didn't think there was much that could be done to rescue my noisy image. In vain, I decided to give Noise Ninja's downloadable demo plug-in a try. The installation was easy. I opened my image in Photoshop CS2 and selected the Noise Ninja plug-in from the filter menu.
I used the automatic settings and was amazed with the results. The digital noise in the image disappeared, like magic. My photograph was a work of art, unmarred by evil noise.
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Kathleen McDade
Posted on 08/10/2007 at 1:08:00 PM