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Before white balance and exposure adjustments |
After white balance and exposure adjustments |
The "Adjust" tab of the RAW dialog box has also exposure, shadow, brightness, and contrast sliders. Although these have of course a similar effect as Levels, a per channel Levels adjustment feature would be desirable. Also missing is a (per channel) Curves adjustment, present in higher end RAW software. The "Adjust" tab has also a main saturation slider, while the advanced "Calibration" tab allows you to fine tune the hue and saturation of the individual color channels, as well as the shadow tint. Even though Photoshop CS features now a new Histogram Palette, the RAW dialog box also features live histograms.
Camera RAW - Noise Reduction
Analyzing and developing noise reduction methods is one of my favorite digital imaging activities. With Photoshop CS, Adobe has created an excellent noise reduction method for RAW files via the "Detail" tab. It would be great to have this feature implemented for JPEGs as well.
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Before noise reduction |
After noise reduction |
The color noise reduction and luminance smoothing sliders allow you to reduce color and luminance noise independently. The latter should be used with caution because it can quickly lead to an artificial "water paint" effect with too uniform surfaces. Overall, the noise reduction performs very well and preserves image detail and edge sharpness. However, there is still room for improvement on large uniform areas as shown in this example which just focuses on the red channel where the noise is most visible. The wavy pattern in the sky is typical for automated noise removal methods, and is the result of blurring the LAB color channels, thereby smoothening color noise while leaving the lightness/luminance channel (and hence sharpness) intact. Manual noise removal can lead to much more uniform skies but requires more time, the typical digital imaging trade-off.
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RGB composite image after noise reduction |
Red channel before noise reduction |
Red channel after Photoshop CS RAW |
Red channel after |
I also noticed that when this particular Nikon *.NEF image was opened in Photoshop CS without noise reduction, the noise was stronger (albeit more looking like real film grain) than the typical noise present when opening the same file with Nikon Capture 3.5, indicating the RAW data are processed differently in both programs. A more detailed noise analysis can be found on my website http://www.VincentBockaert.com.
Camera RAW - Chromatic Aberrations
Chromatic aberrations are typically removed by applying a local desaturation in the corresponding color channels. The "Lens" tab of the RAW dialog box provides a very easy to use and effective way of reducing certain types of chromatic aberration as shown in this example. I look forward to having this feature implemented for JPEGs as well.
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Before chromatic aberration removal |
After chromatic aberration removal |
There are also two sliders to reduce (symmetrical) vignetting.
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