omg i needed this so bad, thank you! Not sure if you have one one davinci "lighting" yet, but I'd love one! I recorded my first 3 hour interview yesterday and it was a bit of a mess lol
You mean Denoise in DaVinci? Yes, I have a video about that on my channel. In the course of next week I'll get you that extensive review on your video!
Finding your tutorials and tips on darktable helpful! I do a lot of concert photography with extreme lighting (stages lit in red, blue, green etc lighting) and am struggling with how to adjust them in darktable. Would love to see something for extreme lighting conditions sometime. Thank you for what you've put out so far!
Great question! On the bottom of the darkroom, you see a couple of icons. One of them, is a triangle with an exclamation mark. The one besides that, shows the grid. Click the grid one with your right mouse button. Then, change the "overlay color" to your desired color! Hope this has cleared it up for you!
I've heard that using the contrast eualizer module on the "luma" tab means that you drag the rightmost three dots up from the bottom, not from the top down (like you would while working in the "chroma" tab). It's not a module that I understand the WHY behind how something works, so could you explain what's happening?
Sorry mate. You are showing people the wrong way to use contrast eq for denoising...you are changing the contrast curves. The denoise curve is dragged up from the bottom to adjust noise reduction. Just look at the presets you flash you will see those have the denoise curve moved up....
Then enlighten us and tell us how to properly use it with a good explanation Todd. Nobody benefits from hearing what is wrong without the explanation to learn from it. Give me a proper explanation and I'll put it in a video.
@@RicoResolves There are two splines in both the luma and chroma tabs, one thru the middle (that you used) for contrast, and one that is--by default--at the very bottom (right against the 'noisy' line) that is for denoise. Page 108 in the manual. The contrast spline by itself will help, but you're missing the actual denoise element.
Amazing!! Was going to buy software to denoise but now you showed how to do it in Darktable! Thanks Sooo much!!!
Awesome! I'm super glad that this video is helpful to people!
omg i needed this so bad, thank you! Not sure if you have one one davinci "lighting" yet, but I'd love one! I recorded my first 3 hour interview yesterday and it was a bit of a mess lol
You mean Denoise in DaVinci? Yes, I have a video about that on my channel. In the course of next week I'll get you that extensive review on your video!
@@RicoResolves THank you! No rush!
@@LebaneserScrooge It's done :D! I've just posted my comment!
@@RicoResolves THANKS! I'll go check it now!
Finding your tutorials and tips on darktable helpful! I do a lot of concert photography with extreme lighting (stages lit in red, blue, green etc lighting) and am struggling with how to adjust them in darktable. Would love to see something for extreme lighting conditions sometime. Thank you for what you've put out so far!
Send me a photo to info@ricoresolves.com that I can edit and use in a video. I'll show and explain what I can do!
A very effective process and very well presented and explained. Thank you.
Thanks Berny! Hope to have welcomed you as a subscriber!
Cheers mate 👍
Thanks Badger!
Thank you.
Just one question : how do you get red line for the drawing mask ?
Great question! On the bottom of the darkroom, you see a couple of icons. One of them, is a triangle with an exclamation mark. The one besides that, shows the grid. Click the grid one with your right mouse button. Then, change the "overlay color" to your desired color! Hope this has cleared it up for you!
@@RicoResolvesThank you
I've heard that using the contrast eualizer module on the "luma" tab means that you drag the rightmost three dots up from the bottom, not from the top down (like you would while working in the "chroma" tab).
It's not a module that I understand the WHY behind how something works, so could you explain what's happening?
You are right..
Denoising is a separate curve that you access by dragging up from the bottom...
I'm going to rectify this. Thanks guys
the first de-noise was enough, seeing grain when zoomed in is desirable in my opinion, when I see photos that are too smooth it just looks fake
Sorry mate. You are showing people the wrong way to use contrast eq for denoising...you are changing the contrast curves. The denoise curve is dragged up from the bottom to adjust noise reduction. Just look at the presets you flash you will see those have the denoise curve moved up....
Then enlighten us and tell us how to properly use it with a good explanation Todd. Nobody benefits from hearing what is wrong without the explanation to learn from it. Give me a proper explanation and I'll put it in a video.
@@RicoResolves There are two splines in both the luma and chroma tabs, one thru the middle (that you used) for contrast, and one that is--by default--at the very bottom (right against the 'noisy' line) that is for denoise. Page 108 in the manual.
The contrast spline by itself will help, but you're missing the actual denoise element.
Your videos would be much more helpful if you didn't gloss over the steps so we could follow along
What do you mean?