A nasty trick that I use on extreme situations where the area involved is very dark, I locally de-saturate the offensive area to remove the red/green spots. Of course there are lots of times that this is totally inappropriate but it also can look quite natural and it avoids the very harsh heavy denoise effect.
David On 13-08-05 02:33 PM, Togan Muftuoglu wrote: >>>>>> On Mon, 5 Aug 2013 23:29:35 +0200, Federico Bruni <[email protected]> >>>>>> said: > Federico> 2013/8/5 Patrick Shanahan <[email protected]> > >> I took your image and backed to history step 3, applied "profiled" > >> denoise and adjusted exposure. See what you think. > >> > >> http://wahoo.no-ip.org/~pat/20110901_222953_dt.jpg > >> http://wahoo.no-ip.org/~pat/20110901_222953.NEF.xmp > >> > >> I believe "profiled" denoise is better. > >> > > Federico> Thank you for the try. > Federico> I'm having hard times using your .xmp file... anyway, I > compared the two > > AFAIK Patrick is using daily git builds maybe that is the reason > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Get your SQL database under version control now! Version control is standard for application code, but databases havent caught up. So what steps can you take to put your SQL databases under version control? Why should you start doing it? Read more to find out. http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=49501711&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk _______________________________________________ Darktable-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/darktable-users
