Opening a Canon .CR2 in Photoshop CS6, Camera Raw generates a significant amount of noise or graininess in the image compared with the simultaneously saved .JPG file. This results in the image from the raw file being of reduced quality. I never had this problem using Photoshop CS5.Â
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Is this the result of some setting being turned on? If so, I have been unable to figure out which one. The only other possibility is that there is a severe flaw in the latest version of the Camera Raw plugin.
Do camera profiles (such as camera standard) affect sharpening, noise reduction? or just exposure? Â I ask because my default sharpening is 50 but I recently switched from Adobe Standard to Camera Standard
Can't open file from Nikon D7100 in Camera RAW Plug-In,i have Photoshop CS5 and plugin is upgraded.Format NEF from Nikon D 7100 is not in this plug-in photoshop.
I am using Photoshop Elements 11, using WIndows 7 Operating System. I have a new camera Canon Rebel T5i, and having problem viewing images in raw format (cr2).Message in PE11, states, "Camera model not supported by installed version of Camera raw."  Canon software views images. Suspect my minimum camera raw plug in version does not support this new camera..I am unable to locate in the software any menu item that allows me to view the camera raw plug in version.
Have no choices in the camera calibration tab inside camera raw plugin. Use CS3 and Raw 4.6. Are choices only available in later version or PS? Also in Raw preferences choice for camera serial number and also setting as defaults. Where to enter serial number etc.
my PSE11 was working fine until i bought a new camera and tried to upload photos from my RAW files. It gave me this message  "Could not complete your request because the file appears to be from a camera model which is not supported by the installed version of Camera Raw.Please visit the Camera Raw documentation for additional information."  so i tried to install the update.... installed it fine, kept getting the same message when i would try to open the photo. after researching online i found the suggestion of uninstalling and reinstalling photoshop elements. i did that once, tried the update again...same results. uninstalled again. tried the update again and still getting the same message. ive checked the adobe website and everywhere i look says the version of the camera raw DOES support my camera (nikon D7100).
After an, automatic, update to camera raw 7.3 in Photoshop Elements 11 all Camera Profiles are gone. All that is left is "Matrix". I use Elements 11, windows Vista on a 64-bit machine, my camera is a Nikon D7000.
What is causing the colored noise in the above image? This appears before I do any editing. When I import the image from Lightroom 5.Â
I turn on the Gamut Warning, and it disappears. I know. But then, obviously, the gray from the Gamut Warning occupies parts of the image. I open the image as a 16 bit PSD.
I am trying to create a star field for this school project. I've been trying to create one using the Add noise feature on a black background. I get to the point were I'm pretty satisfied with the end result. I used some other adjustments like curves, brightness and contrast, and exposure. All of these created a pretty solid star field. However I've noticed two things when trying to save the image at hand as a JPG or apply the image to a new layer. Both instances yield the image reverting back to the initial add noise, as if it adds the original noise I started with when I first began the project and I'm at my wits ends as to why it's doing that.
I hope this is the right place to ask. I have had some people complain that there is often noise in many my photos. The problem is I am unable to see it myself. Maybe it is my poor vision. Mt question is, "Is there a way that a person can make the area of a phot that has noise in it stand out like in a highlite or something making it obvious where it needs removed?"
I am envisioning a software that makes all areas of the photo red where the noise is. I have the software tools that you use to remove it but first I need to be able to see it. If this is the wrong forum for this question, please direct me to where the right one is. Notice, I did not say, "Tell me where I can go?.
I can't remember reading any tutorials on dealing with noise in Photoshop. Scott Kelby dedicates a whole paragraph in his CS3 book for digital photographers. I need to make a decision on what noise reduction plugin to buy, so if you can reply to thread I can get a consensus of what is being used most.
I recently began creating an image and when it came time to flatten this image, the noise I intentionally put in was softened to a regular glow. I am using CS2 and i used the Layer Style > Outer Glow > and then I added noise with blend mode linear dodge and an opacity of 68%. Anyone know if there is a way I can flatten the image with a way to maintain the noise?
If the circumstances force me to work on images with noise which have to be enlarged, and if I use noise reduction based on noise-pattern-recognition, is it better to carry out the noise reduction before or after the enlargement (and in case the answer is after, which resampling method would resample the image (and thus the noise) best for subsequent noise reduction?)
I do a lot of UI design and webdesign in Photoshop and as most people I like to apply a subtle noise here and there. I usually do it this way:
First I decide whether I want black or white noise. Secondly I create a new layer and fill it with opposite color. Then I choose Add Noise and apply 100% uniform monochromatic noise. In the end I choose between Multiply and Screen mode according to the noise I want and play around with opacity. Â Now I am coding a website in HTML5 and CSS3, which allows me to recreate all elements without unnecessary images and workarounds, but I am not able to create appropriate texture to emulate the noise. For example black noise: I wanted to create the noise as I usually would, just skipping the Multiply blending mode part and rather trying to substitute white color with transparent (and accordingly for shades), meaning I will get document where some pixels would be 100% black, some would be 0% black, and the rest between. In CSS I would then repeat this over some element and change opacity accordingly.
Noise Ninja crashes my PS CS6. What'e even worse is PS CS6 can NOT be restarted without restarting the computer first! As the noise filter in PS CS6 works really poorly, any software that works? I use the 64 bit version. No other problems - so far.
Level: Newbie  OS: Windows 7 64bit   Ps: CS6  I went through a half A***d tutorial (to make an iPad) which was a huge part of my problem ...  The tut would say to do things that couldn't be done - so I would find an other way ... which I believe created problems  when I was done making the iPad and then tried to Group my layers into some sort of order ...  The Noise (Filter) I used on the Main Shape of the iPad spilled out of its Clipping Mask and onto the BG layer ...  or actually onto every aspect of iPad  Am I assuming correctly that having moved the Layers around and placing them into Groups somehow disrupted the Clipping Mask?  I read that I can make a New Group and then just drag the Layers up to the Folder  However, I couldn't find in the manual anything about what to do when moving Layers into New Groups goes wrong ...
"Cannot complete the reduce noise command in cs2 due to program error." Have uninstalled and reinstalled photoshop but same message appears when I click filter>noise>reduce noise. Same thing happens in filter>sharpen>smart sharpen. These 2 filters used to be working.
Just looking for some 'do's & don'ts' as far as when to use the 'Noise Ninja' noise removal plug-in in one's workflow. The plug-in tutorial writes that noise removal should be used as early as possible in the workflow...especially before any color correcting, cropping, etc. So if this is true, why not write just to use it as your very 1st step before adjusting any/all photos?? I guess my question is: if noise removal is needed, when should you use it? Is there any downside to having this as my first step in the workflow before taking the photo into CS3 RAW for 1st adjustments?
I'm using photoshop for vision research and am applying gaussian noise to black backgrounds using Filter -->Add noise --> Gaussian 20%. In CS2 a new random noise pattern would be generated each time I added noise to a different black background -- and this what I needed. But in CS3 & CS4, the same noise pattern is generated every time, and I need to have it generating different noise patterns. Is there a switch I'm missing or is this just something that was changed in CS3 and CS4? This issue occurs on my Mac and Windows CS3 and Vista CS4 machines.