I think the most significant addition is the multi-screen view.
Now Topaz Labs has a newer version of their application/plug in. On some large images, I had to wait almost a minute before the image was cleaned up. My only complaint was that it was not a speed demon. And that's it.I took a look at Topaz DeNoise AI earlier this year and found it effective at removing noise without killing the details in your images. So, in #2 step you go to unpacked "Batch_Denoiser_v1.xxx" folder, pick a preset and create a shortcut for it. Then just grab the video file(s) you want to process and drop them on that shortcutĭepending on the preset you either will see a running encoder console, or a video preview window, where you can check how well the preset is work for you. You pick a preset file and create a desktop shortcut for it (don't copy by accident - won't work!) Most of the naming is self descriptive, or it seems so to me All of them work in a similar way:
install AviSynthPlus with default optionsĢ) Each preset is a windows batch file, that automates most of necessary steps. means a whole folder where Readme.txt is located, ie "Batch_Denoiser_v1.xxx" and permanent location means you do not delete it after installationġ) Go to the "apps\_Install" folder and via option "Run as administrator": Hmm, why did you do such thing? Readme instructions:Ġ) Unpack/Save this folder to some permanent location. I followed the instructions in the readme file and I copied Converter, Denoiser and Effects folders to the Avisynth+ one. This is exciting, but I am unable to install it.
added limited support for interlaced input
proxy 1080p DNxHD modified to reduce bitrate new 'VFR-to-CFR' converter, without transcoding, remux only Use with care - can produce visible artefacts in case of busy background and/or complex movements new 'Slo-Mo' conversion, 33%, 50%, 75% of original speed. new 'All-in-1 custom' tool allows combined processing Recommended for rectilinear UWA and 'defished' fisheye lenses updated 'Side-by-Side preview' tool, now it's possible to make comparison between filters itself, not only source vs filter Previous (v1.2) are still there just in case, zipped in the 'avs\' folder In addition 'Very_high/Max' are somewhat stronger now and thus farther apart from 'High'. all 'Denoiser' presets were reworked and got major speed-up (mostly 1.5x-2x faster, some up to 3x). Installation files (zip, readme included) + video test samples here: mov container, converting dolby ac3 into pcm stereo.
For best results try to disable in-camera noise reduction (or set to lowest possible)īatch conversion into intermediate and delivery formats, 1080p proxy creation, Filtering and encoding can be tweaked or new presets can be added without much hassle The audio from original video is copied into filtered clip "as is", without any processing
Output video codecs: x264, NVEnc(h264,HEVC), DNxHR, Cineform, ProRes Supports multicore CPU threads management, NVidia GPU encoding, 10-bit 4:2:2 input Effective even against heavy grain/noise
Ready to use - include presets for "Low", "Medium", "High" filtering, plus "V-log" Result will be stored in a separate folder along the original Simple to use - just drag and drop files onto the preset shortcut.
Feel free to try it out and share your experience. Essentially, I created a few basic presets (low-mid-high and v-log) and made them work via drag-and-drop method. Last month, trying to help a non-techie friend, I think I've found a way to use it even for newbies. Probably because there is no GUI - to setup and use you have to dig into scripts. Still, despite its effectiveness, it has little recognition. I use this denoising tool (Avisynth + MVTools) for years, and results always impressed me.