![]() ![]() Check out my Capture One Style Packs, Lightroom Presets and eBooks If you buy through the above links, we get a small commission, which helps run this site. If you want to help support our blog, you can do so if you buy anything from our affiliate partners: Help Support the Blog Buy from our affiliates The result looks like you took a squeegee and wiped all the noise off the image. Because it’s using AI, it’s not a real-time process, and as such, uses the Enhance function (the same one that does super resolution) to create a new denoised DNG file. Lightroom 12.3 adds AI based denoising, and the results are nothing short of amazing (in my opinion). However, with Lightroom 12.3 Adobe has made a giant step forward, albeit in a slightly different way than perhaps people were expecting. ![]() It hasn’t been updated for a long time, and other applications arguably did a better job in this regard. The noise reduction technology was getting a little stale in Lightroom, let's face it. 90% of the time when I used the switch on a panel, it was to temporarily disable the edits for a before/after look at just the adjustments in a specific panel. I’m sure some people will be annoyed by this change because people don’t like changes, but it actually makes more sense once you’ve used it for a while. If you’ve made no changes to a panel, then the eyeball will be greyed out, indicating that said panel has had no changes made to it. It should also be noted that the eyeballs act as edit indicators for a specific adjustment panel. This allows you to turn off an edit panel, rather than just temporarily hiding it. If you want to convert these to switches like in previous versions, just hold down the alt/option key and the eyeballs will turn to switches. Clicking and holding on an eyeball icon will temporarily disable the edits in the panel, and releasing the mouse will re-enable the edits.
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