Hi Nathan, very good video as always, I always learn a lot from you. I do have one question, when do you generally run the denoise, at the beginning, after you’ve done some enhancing, or after you crop? Is there a general rule? Thanks.
Great vid, do you have any videos with similar breakdowns / flow to this where you show how to get nice and white/bright walls and ceilings while keeping the color looking natural and not messing with the high hats or other lights on the ceiling. Other than just taking a brush and lowering the shadows on the walls and ceiling.
Nathan. Been following you for quit some time , I thought you were an advocate of converting your exteriors to tiffs for acurate manufacture color detail. Did something change?
Nothing's changed; in fact, I mention in the video that exposure blending would be preferred. This is merely another tool/technique to use when needed. In fact, I show the exposure blending and other techniques in much more detail in my exterior course, here's a link if you'd like to check that out: ProExteriors.NathanCool.com
No need. I don't use CPLs for any of my REP work. However, when shooting video footage from a drone at the ocean, we have used CPLs on the drone on exceptionally sunny/glary days.
my question is did you go out and shoot this underexpoused and fix this in post with this new way of editing ...do you do this indoors or only outside to get the sky right and then fix the rest of the photo in post ?
I recommend exposure blending with brackets, which this was part of. It's something I cover in more detail in my course in pro exteriors, here's a link if you'd like to check that out: proexteriors.nathancool.com
I like the idea of quicker edits in LrC for pure MLS shoots, but my PC is getting old and LrC denoise with AI takes 20-30 MINUTES per image. I do have Topaz Denoise AI, which takes about 3 minutes, but then the added time of launching. Do you have a recommendation for an off-the-shelf Windows PC, or do you build your own? I am way past due for an upgrade...I use a Lenovo desktop that is about 5 years old, but doesn't really have the power capacity for a faster video card, which is likely part of the problem.
Definitely sounds like it's time to upgrade your PC. Denoise takes just a few seconds on my machines. These are things I cover in-depth in my expert editing course, here's a link if you'd like to check that out: expertediting.nathancool.com
Nope 😊 It never worked on JPGs. It only ever worked on RAW files. It needs a true raw file that has bayered/mosaic information so it can deduce sensor noise...only RAW files have that information.
Nope. Real estate and other marketing-centric genres require realism and can be sued if faltering from truth-in-content. AI will not replace photographers; it will only help us.
Nice job Nathan, thanks for this
Glad you liked it!
That's so amazing, thank you for sharing!
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it!
Hope you are safe! 🙏🤞🏻
We are, thank you for asking!
It's really interesting.
Thank you!
Hi Nathan, very good video as always, I always learn a lot from you. I do have one question, when do you generally run the denoise, at the beginning, after you’ve done some enhancing, or after you crop? Is there a general rule? Thanks.
Thank you! I run it after adjustments.
Great vid, do you have any videos with similar breakdowns / flow to this where you show how to get nice and white/bright walls and ceilings while keeping the color looking natural and not messing with the high hats or other lights on the ceiling. Other than just taking a brush and lowering the shadows on the walls and ceiling.
Thank you! Yep, I have complete video courses that cover pro techniques like those you mentioned (and more) at LearnRE.NathanCool.com
Nathan. Been following you for quit some time , I thought you were an advocate of converting your exteriors to tiffs for acurate manufacture color detail. Did something change?
Nothing's changed; in fact, I mention in the video that exposure blending would be preferred. This is merely another tool/technique to use when needed. In fact, I show the exposure blending and other techniques in much more detail in my exterior course, here's a link if you'd like to check that out: ProExteriors.NathanCool.com
@@NathanCoolPhoto I have all your books, thank you
I saw someone saying that for exterior photos, you can use a cpl filter so you can darken the sky? Do you think that it’s going to work?
No need. I don't use CPLs for any of my REP work. However, when shooting video footage from a drone at the ocean, we have used CPLs on the drone on exceptionally sunny/glary days.
my question is did you go out and shoot this underexpoused and fix this in post with this new way of editing ...do you do this indoors or only outside to get the sky right and then fix the rest of the photo in post ?
I recommend exposure blending with brackets, which this was part of. It's something I cover in more detail in my course in pro exteriors, here's a link if you'd like to check that out: proexteriors.nathancool.com
I like the idea of quicker edits in LrC for pure MLS shoots, but my PC is getting old and LrC denoise with AI takes 20-30 MINUTES per image. I do have Topaz Denoise AI, which takes about 3 minutes, but then the added time of launching. Do you have a recommendation for an off-the-shelf Windows PC, or do you build your own? I am way past due for an upgrade...I use a Lenovo desktop that is about 5 years old, but doesn't really have the power capacity for a faster video card, which is likely part of the problem.
Definitely sounds like it's time to upgrade your PC. Denoise takes just a few seconds on my machines. These are things I cover in-depth in my expert editing course, here's a link if you'd like to check that out: expertediting.nathancool.com
I thought the denoise feature only worked on JPEG’s? That may have been the first version if they changed it though.🤷🏻♂️
Nope 😊 It never worked on JPGs. It only ever worked on RAW files. It needs a true raw file that has bayered/mosaic information so it can deduce sensor noise...only RAW files have that information.
I have a question, do you think AI will destroy the entire photography profession? I really want to hear your opinion on this.
Nope. Real estate and other marketing-centric genres require realism and can be sued if faltering from truth-in-content. AI will not replace photographers; it will only help us.
@@NathanCoolPhoto Your words made me feel somewhat relieved because what I see from artificial intelligence is terrifying.