Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2023/03/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I forgot to mention that the team that developed Luminar is virtually the same one that developed Nik - they left Nik after Google took it over and started Skylum, which is the parent company of Luminar. Cheers Jayanand On Wed, Mar 15, 2023 at 10:14?PM Tina Manley <tmanley at gmail.com> wrote: > Wow. That looks amazing. > > Thanks! > > Tina > > > On Wed, Mar 15, 2023 at 12:38?PM Jayanand Govindaraj <jayanand at > gmail.com> > wrote: > >> As Sonny says, Denoise gives far more control, as Topaz has one of the >> best making tools on the market, so it is easy to do localised edits. >> >> If you want global noise reduction, the "Noiseless" module in Luminar AI >> is very good. >> >> https://skylum.com/luminar-ai >> >> Cheers >> Jayanand >> >> >> >> >> On Wed, Mar 15, 2023 at 8:07?PM Tina Manley via LUG <lug at >> leica-users.org> >> wrote: >> >>> LUG - >>> >>> I really like the way Topaz Photo AI rescues some of the faces in my old >>> film scans; however, the end result is too plastic and smooth-looking for >>> me. I've tried reducing the amount of smoothing but that reduces the >>> sharpness, too. What I would like to do is re-introduce the film grain >>> without affecting the sharpening. I've tried in PS - Filter>Noise>Add >>> Noise>Guassian Blur and I've tried the Grain slider in LR but neither of >>> them looks like film grain really. >>> >>> Do you know of a program or setting that will add realistic-looking film >>> grain? >>> >>> TIA >>> >>> Tina >>> >>> -- >>> https://tinamanley.photoshelter.com/index >>> https://pbase.com/tinamanley >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Leica Users Group. >>> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >>> >> > > -- > https://tinamanley.photoshelter.com/index > https://pbase.com/tinamanley >