exiled4979
Established
Lightroom 3 Beta 2 has a Noise adjustment slider, looks god awful (forgot to mention that in the Lightroom thread the other day..)
martin
interestingly enough, I find Lightroom3 noise to be rather good, although, I admit, looks right only if applied with pretty high values, and then downsized, it's not really believable when printed, but ok, still better than digital noise normally present at high ISOs...
nightfly
Well-known
Is this in Lightroom or Photoshop or something else?
You don`t just add grain. Pick color or mono, small, or large, soft or sharp, then use "blend if" to keep grain out of shadows and highlights . Split the sliders with the alt key or command key to make smooth transitions. Then adjust the opacity of that layer to suit.
I defy you to tell it from real film.
P
Peter S
Guest
It is in Photoshop, but must be after CS3, because I do not recognize all of the options. On www.thelightsright.com/CreatingARealisticFilmGrainEffect they explain a similar technique.
squirrel$$$bandit
Veteran
I kinda like the LR3 grain effect.
Ronald M
Veteran
I apply the grain to a new layer of the image in Photoshop.
If you just add grain you get garbage.
If you just add grain you get garbage.
dantes
Member
Thanks for the link Peter S -
I do think the LR grain is OK... but when comparing it TrueGrain, just isnt as authentic.
What do you all think of the monochrome conversion in TrueGrain: http://grubbasoft.s3.amazonaws.com/truegrain-video-1.2.mov
How does this conversion compare with LR or Nik?
I do think the LR grain is OK... but when comparing it TrueGrain, just isnt as authentic.
What do you all think of the monochrome conversion in TrueGrain: http://grubbasoft.s3.amazonaws.com/truegrain-video-1.2.mov
How does this conversion compare with LR or Nik?
Jamie123
Veteran
Back when I started the thread LR3 hadn't been out yet. Now I also use LR3 for grain and love it.
While the thread continued being mostly about grain in b&w pictures, I started it to inquire about adding grain in a color photo. Unlike most I usually don't add grain in order to get a grainy picture. I'm not after the 35mm grain look. What I do is add just a little bit of grain to give the image a subtle texture and 'hide' the pixels.
If I do any kind of cloning or spot removal I apply the grain only after I'm done retouching.
While the thread continued being mostly about grain in b&w pictures, I started it to inquire about adding grain in a color photo. Unlike most I usually don't add grain in order to get a grainy picture. I'm not after the 35mm grain look. What I do is add just a little bit of grain to give the image a subtle texture and 'hide' the pixels.
If I do any kind of cloning or spot removal I apply the grain only after I'm done retouching.
squirrel$$$bandit
Veteran
Whoa, TrueGrain is cheap now! I might well buy it. Nice deal indeed.
dantes
Member
Yeah, much cheaper now -- I remember seeing it many years ago. It was $300 a few years ago!
I was wondering why I didnt just get it in the first place.
Also, how do you all think the b & W conversion compares to Nik Silver Efex -- which I think does some grain too now...(http://niktrainingvideos.com/video/sep/SEP_Film_Types/SEP_Film_Types.html)
I was wondering why I didnt just get it in the first place.
Also, how do you all think the b & W conversion compares to Nik Silver Efex -- which I think does some grain too now...(http://niktrainingvideos.com/video/sep/SEP_Film_Types/SEP_Film_Types.html)
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