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removing digital noisePosted by Laurie
too much too soon plugins has a noise reduction plug in. Its free but you really should donate some money if you like it
[www.mattias.nu] There is also DE: Noise [www.revisionfx.com] works very well Michael Horton -------------------
i haven't tried DE:Noise,
but i am currently using Neat Video [www.neatvideo.com] which also works very well. nick
DE:Noise works really well.
My new favorite is Video Purifier by Innobits. It can do more than just remove noise (deinterlacing, scaling). -Dave
Innobits' Video Purifier does wonders to noisy video, especially when it must be compressed for DVD release, etc. But I find Purifier to have two limitations in its treatment of video. One limitation is that it clips Y' values at 235 in 8-bit (or at 940 in 10-bit). The other limitation is that it doesn't maintain 10-bit fine gradations. It's as if Purifier converts the 10-bit to 8-bit, does its thing in 8-bit, and converts back to 10-bit. There might be workarounds to the first limitation but not to the second one.
I've written a small report on the 10-bit problem including sample clips for checking if Purifier behaves the same on your system. Dennis Couzin Berlin, Germany
I just worked on the BETA Test team for Red Giant's latest gem...Magic Bullet Denoiser:
[www.redgiantsoftware.com] FCP / AE $99 Kills noise in a few clicks. Tell 'em Joey Morelli sent you When life gives you dilemmas...make dilemmanade.
no just $99 or $49 for the "home" version (which is 8-bit rendering only) dii read that Magic Bullet Denoiser only works on progressive material? so while it might be good for some low-light noise, would not a solution for cleaning up old VHS or other video sources. nick
Since the OP is inquiring about / cleaning up 24p (progressive) footage, Denoiser is a VERY efficient inexpensive solution for her IMHO. I recommend it based on my personal tests done with the plug-in on 720p (also progressive) footage. STUNNING results. In the examples I have posted below, the footage was captured incorrectly and introduced grain / noise into the footage. Here are 2 short examples I personally created:
BEFORE (RAW - untouched footage): www.digidojo.net/tut_stuff/denoiser_5994_RAW_H264.mov AFTER (Denoiser / Magic Bullet Looks applied & tweaked): www.digidojo.net/tut_stuff/denoiser_5994_DENOISER_after_H264.mov When life gives you dilemmas...make dilemmanade.
To my eyes, grafixjoe's example with Magic Bullet Denoiser has an artificial, over-crispened look. Denoiser depends heavily on contraposing softening with sharpening. Red Giant posts an excellent Denoiser tutorial. Tellingly, the tutorial is almostly completely about techniques applicable to a single frame. Innobits' Video Purifier is a completely different animal. Its anti-noise processing does no softening, except as an option, and no sharpening at all. Purifier is pretty effective against sizzly video noise while preserving the naturalness of the image -- nobody's freckles are erased and there's no "National Geographic" look. Despite my gripes about Purifier, it has some advantages.
Dennis Couzin Berlin, Germany
dcousin is over-analyzing...my posts are compressions of a compression (H.264 from a DVCProHD). Pretty darn free of noise for 2 clicks I would say. There are many parameters to tweak to taste so that is by no means all there is. My raw footage came out amazing and my client loved it so that's all that matters
Open thee mind and see what can be. There's more than one way to do ANYTHING. When life gives you dilemmas...make dilemmanade.
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