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Actually DELETE THE NOISE with Mean in Photoshop!

Actually DELETE THE NOISE with Mean in Photoshop!

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
we will use multiple images and utilize the features of smart objects to combine and tackle the noise automatically Vedran: One critique on this video, while I know this technique works, have tried it myself, why do you set an example of a shot where you would have both time for a long exposure and time to set up a stabilized shot on a tripod or on a bookshelf. This is as static a subject as they get.
In general, multiple shots = longer exposure. Averaging shots means you are combining the photons from multiple exposures.
This technique is most useful when you don't have time or means to set up a stabilized shot, or when you want to make a long exposure shot with a lot of movement in broad daylight to avoid overexposure.

Date: 2022-07-19

Comments and reviews: 19


Fantastic, i used this method today and it worked wonders, although i had to cheat the original stack. i had one opportunity for one shot, as it was falling balloons, which if tried again would fall differently, so a quick 20 virtual copies in lightroom with an edit of varying degrees of noise reduction on each. then followed the rest of the tutorial in photoshop. it worked wonders. LOVE your content
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I have an important question: how can I use this method when I use blend mode screen to make pictures brighter? Let's say 7 pictures, I open them as layers in PS, then select all of them and choose blend mode screen. Important step in astro photography for example. Now how can I then as a next step use stacking mode mean? When I do this the picture gets dark again.
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It finally works. I tried 4 times but nothing happens, then after a zoom in and out, the process worked. The bad part is that i have enabled the watermarks on my pictures, and now the watermark is doubled, due the alignment procedure (shot the photos while handheld. But for the first try, im happy with the results. Thanks so much. my photos looks cleaner now
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This is a really complicated solution for such a simple problem. Don't just take a whole bunch of grainy photos using a high ISO, and instead set your ISO to the lowest setting, do a long exposure while using something to keep the camera steady. Voila! You have yourself an image with no noise, and straight out of the camera too. Well that was easy
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Well if you have the insight to take tens of photos of the same subject to 'clean' out the noise later by stacking, you might just as well slow your shutter speed a few stops, and tone down your ISO settings. Done in one shot. It's not like you can replicate this without a tripod anyway, so why not do it the right way? save up some disk space.
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Well that is a really easy to follow tutorial.
I actually use this process to make long exposures, if I forget my ND filters. For that you need at least a tripod.
Just take a lot of photos, then add them together with the same process and you can get a very similar Image to the one you can get with very expensive ND filters.

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Good tutorial! Unmesh, but let me know:
What if I have following scenarios
1. Single picture with noise.
2. Bunch of images taken in dynamic mode.
Kindly make video on this as well
Because I stuck in the case when I am retouching product photos and it is noisy, now what I have to do?
Thanks

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hey, I really enjoy your contents. can you suggest something for a music concert or anything like that with low light? where the subject is moving so you can't really lower your shutter speed either but the photos come out to be a lot noisy. what should we do in those times?
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Quite a nice idea, but (as you say) it works only when what you're shooting remains completely still, which in practice means inanimate objects. All living things tend to move, including plants when there's any wind at all.
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I have a bunch of old photos that were scanned in from polaroid and they are low quality with lots of grain. I'm looking for an efficient way of taking some of the grain out to clear up the old photos.
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Hello, this is very useful tutorial, I have a simple question: what if I use one image and make copies of it and do the steps, would it make the same results as uploading more shots of one item?
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love your videos but, what if (as most of us wouldn't know to take many pictures before watching your video) we have just a single picture? btw you look like the barby ken, indian version though: P
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Hey, have a question. This is working if we simply copying the image in Lightroom at virtual copy of same image, 20 times and open that 20 copy of same image for make noise reduction? Thanks
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If you wonder why would a useful advice video get so many dislikes, it is because your face keeps popping out. Keep your face stayed in that small tab in Photoshop, fool.
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If you want the best result when using a phone or camera handheld, just hold down the shutter button and it will do continuous shooting and will help a LOT
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Awesome tutorial as always! Question though, if you just make 20+ layer copies can you achieve the same effect or do they all need to be different photos?
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Can you do this with a stars/milky way photo one day? I've heard about stacking, I can provide you with files soon since I am planning to shoot it soon
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Excellent tutorial as always i was just wondering why take similar pic many times with similar setting? Cant we copy many times and use mean tool?
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I have only a single picture from my client, does duplicating the same image many times works. It seems to have no effect, Is there anyother way?
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