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NeatImage SLW, User Guide

Neat Image, User's Guide

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
33 views

NeatImage SLW, User Guide

Neat Image, User's Guide

Uploaded by

Feelxx
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 68

Neat Image

standalone application (Win)

To make images look better.

User guide
Document version 8.1, 12-October-2016

Neat Image 1999-2016 Neat Image team, ABSoft. All rights reserved.
User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

Table of contents
1 Introduction 4
1.1 Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2 Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.3 Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

2 Key concepts 7
2.1 What it can do functionality of Neat Image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.2 When it works types of input images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

3 Filtration process overview 8


3.1 Overview of Neat Image filtration process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.2 Running Neat Image on a sample image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

4 Filtration process details 11


4.1 Stage I. Open an input image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.2 Stage II. Prepare a device noise profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.3 Stage III. Adjust filter settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.4 Stage IV (a). Beginner Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
4.5 Stage IV (b). Advanced Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
4.6 Stage V. Save filter settings into a preset (optional) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
4.7 Stage VI. Apply filter to the input image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
4.8 Stage VII. Save the output image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

5 Device noise profiles 26


5.1 Getting ready-made noise profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
5.2 Building a profile for a device mode (standard profiling procedure) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
5.3 Preparing profile set for different device modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
5.4 Using noise profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

6 Additional tools 40
6.1 Variants of filtration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
6.2 Alternative modes of image viewer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
6.3 Navigator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
6.4 Profile Viewer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

7 Batch processing 43
7.1 All Tasks tab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
7.2 Creating new image filtration tasks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
7.3 Configuring image filtration tasks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
7.4 Processing image filtration tasks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
7.5 Reviewing processing results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
7.6 Saving output images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
7.7 Removing image filtration tasks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48

8 Preferences 49
8.1 General preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
8.2 Defaults . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
8.3 Profiling preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
8.4 Matching preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
8.5 Filtration preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
8.6 Performance preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
8.7 Folder preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
8.8 Output preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54

9 Command line version 56

10 Using Neat Image with Lightroom 57

11 Examples 58
11.1 Images to build a noise profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
11.2 Filtration results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

12 Questions and answers 61


12.1 General questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
12.2 Filtration-related questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61

13 Tips and tricks 63


13.1 Preventing banding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
13.2 Filtration of shadow areas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
13.3 Partial filtration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63

14 Information 64
14.1 Issues and bugs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
14.2 Plans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
14.3 Detailed feature map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
14.4 Contacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
14.5 Legal information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
14.6 Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
14.7 Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67

Index 68

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

1. Introduction
1.1. Overview
Neat Image is a filter software designed to reduce
Noise is a serious problem that hinders
visible noise and grain in digital photographic images.
high-quality digital image processing. In
Neat Image detects, analyzes and reduces noise. digital photography, the consumer- and
Neat Image incorporates the most advanced image prosumer-level cameras produce images with
noise reduction algorithms in the industry. The an easily noticeable noise component. This
filtration quality is also higher than that of other component is especially strong in images
methods because Neat Image takes into account noise shot at high ISO rates. The noise reduces the
characteristics of particular image acquisition devices, visual quality of digital images and resulting
making the filtration more accurate. Using device printouts. Some image processing operations,
noise profiles, Neat Image adapts itself to almost any like sharpening, make quality of noisy images
input device digital camera, scanner, etc. even worse.

The rich control set of the noise filter allows you to easily achieve the
Online examples of
desired level of noise reduction. In addition, Neat Image can make
Neat Image noise reduction:
images look sharper without degradation of image quality (which is
https://ni.neatvideo.com/
usually inevitable with noisy images). Smart application of sharpening
based on preceding noise analysis makes such an effect possible.
Neat Image standalone (Win) is currently produced in three editions: Demo, Home and Pro. All editions
provide top-quality noise reduction and sharpening. The key differences are the following:
Demo is a freeware edition of the software with limited functionality
Home edition supports 8-bit images and limited batching (up to 100 images in one batch)
Pro edition supports 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit images and unlimited batching

1.2. Features
Noise Reduction and Smart Sharpening
Advanced noise filters to reduce noise and grain in digital images
Complete control over the filter settings to achieve the desired level of noise reduction
Smart sharpening filter to make images look sharper without amplification of noise
8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit image support to fully utilize capabilities of modern image acquisition
devices and support HDR post-processing workflows
CUDA and OpenCL acceleration to speed up processing using computation-capable GPUs

Device Noise Profiles


Auto Profile to build noise profiles for your camera or scanner on the fly
Rich set of pre-built noise profiles in the online profile library
Auto Match to select the most suitable pre-built noise profiles
Batch profiler to automate profiling with the Calibration Target

Batch Processing
Batch functionality to process many images automatically
Background processing: while multiple images are processed in background, you can prepare
new images in Neat Image or work in another application

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

Preview
Embedded preview for any selected image area
Preview of filtration results separately for each channel and frequency component
Some features are only available in the Home or Pro edition. Detailed feature map (page 64) explains the
differences between Neat Image Demo, Home and Pro editions in details.

1.3. Requirements
1.3.1. Hardware requirements
System requirements for practical use of Neat Image depend on size of input images. The more system
RAM is available the larger the images that can be handled. The processing speed is determined primarily
by the processors number-crunching power (clock frequency, number of cores/processors, cache size),
memory speed and availability of supported computation-capable GPUs.
Recommended system configuration to process photos produced by modern digital cameras:
Intel i7 / i5 / Xeon / compatible; single or multi-processor
Windows 10.x, 8.x, 7, Vista, XP; 64-bit

Optional CUDA acceleration requires:


CUDA-capable NVIDIA GPU with compute capability 2.0 or higher;
Recent video driver supporting CUDA 8 or newer
(you can download the latest versions of the video drivers from http://www.nvidia.com)

Optional OpenCL acceleration requires:


Supported AMD video card:
AMD Radeon HD 77xx/78xx/79xx;
AMD Radeon HD 7790;
AMD Radeon HD 87xx/88xx/89xx;
AMD Radeon R7 250X/260/265/260X;
AMD Radeon R7 360/370;
AMD Radeon R9 255/270/280/285/290; 250X/270X/280X/290X/295X2;
AMD Radeon R9 380/390/390X;
AMD Radeon R9 Fury / R9 Nano / R9 Fury X / Pro Duo;
AMD Radeon RX 460/470/480;
Another AMD GPU based on one of the following chip series: Cape Verde, Pitcairn, Tahiti,
Bonaire, Hawaii, Tonga, Fiji, Ellesmere, Baffin
The latest version of AMD Catalyst driver.
If you experince a problem with the latest version of the driver, please check the known issues
page for possible solutions:
https://ni.neatvideo.com/support/known-issues
You can download the latest and archive versions of Catalyst Driver from
http://support.amd.com/en-us/download

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

1.3.2. Supported types of images


Neat Image supports the following formats of input images (the same formats are supported to save output
images 1 ):

TIFF (single image, no layers, no alpha PNG


channel, no mask) 8/16-bit per channel
8/16/32-bit per channel RGB and grayscale
RGB and grayscale
JPEG BMP (uncompressed, Win3x)
8-bit per channel 8-bit per channel
RGB and grayscale RGB

RAW images can be processed after they are converted to TIFFs (using TIFF is recommended to avoid
quality loss due to compression) or to JPEGs (this involves quality loss, because JPEG is a lossy format).
Color input images are supposed to be in a flavor of RGB color space, like AdobeRGB, sRGB, etc. If an
input image is in some flavor of RGB color space then Neat Image produces the output image in exactly
the same flavor of RGB color space.
The minimum size of an input image is 40x40 pixels; the maximum size is usually limited by the amount
of system RAM available.

1 There are some limitations in the Demo edition. Please see Detailed feature map, page 64, for more information.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

2. Key concepts
2.1. What it can do functionality of Neat Image
Neat Image is a digital image filter. Its main function is to reduce noise in digital images.
Neat Image can work with images produced by any imaging devices digital cameras, scanners, etc.
Neat Image can be adjusted to a particular device by means of a device noise profile, which describes the
noise characteristics of the device.
A device noise profile is built by analyzing featureless areas of an image areas that contain no visible or
important details and show only noise. Usually, the software can find such featureless areas completely
automatically. In a difficult case, you can assist it and select a featureless area manually. Finding such
areas is very easy for human eyes but may sometimes be a bit difficult for computer software.
By analyzing those featureless areas, the Auto Profile function builds a profile which describes the properties
of the noise contained there. Using such a profile, Neat Images noise filter can then efficiently reduce
noise in the whole image.
When you have several such noise profiles for different device modes (for example, different ISO rates),
the Auto Match function can automatically select the profile that matches a given input image. In this way,
you can skip noise analysis and simply re-use one of profiles built earlier.
combines the power of Auto Profile and Auto Match by preparing two candidate profiles and then
Smart Profile
selecting the better one for actual image processing. This helps to achieve great results with less manual
assistance.
The noise filter processes images in several spatial frequency ranges. This allows, for example, to
accurately reduce noise in one frequency range while fully preserving details that may be present in
other frequency ranges. In the same way, the filter can also selectively process the color channels.
In addition to the noise filter, there is the smart sharpening filter, which sharpens only details but not noise,
so the noise is not amplified. Combining the noise reduction and sharpening in this way saves processing
time and produces better overall results.

2.2. When it works types of input images


Neat Image is designed to reduce noise in images produced by digital cameras and scanners, and can also
be used to process images from other sources. For Neat Image to be efficient, input images should satisfy
the following requirements:
Noise must be uniformly distributed throughout the image, i.e., there should be no strong
surges of noise intensity in some areas of the image or significant changes of noise characteristics
across the image.
Neat Image works fine, for example, on images with high ISO noise because such noise usually
uniformly covers the whole image area. However, hot or dead pixels (produced by single
broken elements of image sensor) do not satisfy the uniformity condition and, therefore, are not
efficiently removed by Neat Image.
Another frequent source of noise is JPEG compression. The JPEG noise is approximately uniform
when high quality setting (low compression rate, larger file size) is used. However, low compression
quality makes noise non-uniform. Therefore, we recommend using the highest quality levels
whenever possible. Try to avoid visible artifacts (squares or blocks introduced by JPEG
compression) in input images beginning from the early stages of image processing. If you can, use
lossless file formats such as TIFF.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

3. Filtration process overview


3.1. Overview of Neat Image filtration process
When you start Neat Image, the main Neat Image window opens automatically. Then you can take the
following steps to process one image:

1. Open an input image


the image viewer will display the input
image;
the information panel will display relevant
image data;

2. Prepare a device noise profile noise analysis


necessary to filter the image
to build a new profile click the
Auto Profile button; this will automatically
select and analyze a featureless (noise-only)
image area;
if you see that automatic selection includes
any important image details, then move the
selection to an area without details and click
the Auto Profile button again;

Continued on the next page. . .

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

. . . continued from the previous page

3. Adjust the noise filter and sharpening settings


to achieve desired level of noise reduction and
sharpening
try to vary the setting:
Noise Reduction Amounts: Luminance
and see how the preview changes;
when you are happy with the preview
proceed to the next stage;

4. Switch to the Output Image tab and let Neat Image


process the image;
when processing is finished, evaluate the
resulting output image by comparing it with
the input image: click the image to switch
to the original for comparison;

5. Save the output image to a file on the hard drive.

3.2. Running Neat Image on a sample image


There is a test-kit prepared to help you start using Neat Image. You can download it using this direct link:
https://ni.neatvideo.com/project/resources/testkit8.zip, 2.5 MB. Having downloaded, please unzip it to a
new folder on the hard drive.
The test-kit contains a sample image: the SampleImage.jpg file. This is a typical photo taken with a
modern digital camera. The detailed information about the image is available in the
SampleImageInfo.txt file.
Please start Neat Image and go through the stages below to see how it can improve the image:

Stage I. Open the sample image

1. Click in the toolbar in the Input Image tab:


2. In the Select input image(s) dialog, navigate to the folder where the teskit has been unzipped and
double click on the SampleImage.jpg file.
Neat Image will open the sample image.
You will see that there is some strong noise in the image (zoom in to better see the noise). This is typical
noise produced by a digital camera. The task of Neat Image is to reduce this noise.

Stage II. Build a noise profile using Auto Profile


To reduce noise Neat Image generally needs a noise profile describing the noise properties of the image. It
is possible to build such a noise profile using the image itself.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

To prepare a noise profile please do the following:

1. In the Device Noise Profile tab: ,


click (the Auto Profile button);
will try to automatically find and analyze a flat featureless image area that contains only
Auto Profile
noise and no important details.
2. Visually inspect the image area selected by Auto Profile. The area should contain no visible details,
only noise; otherwise the noise profile and subsequent noise reduction may be inaccurate.
If the selected area does contain any details, move the selection to another area without details or
draw a new selection in such an area. Then click the Auto Profile button again.
Once processing is completed, the noise profile is ready and Neat Image can apply its noise reduction to
the image.

Stage III. Check preview

1. Switch to the Noise Filter Settings tab: ;


2. Once preview is automatically prepared, visually evaluate the results of noise reduction.
You can click the image to quickly switch between original and filtered images for comparison.
Zoom in to better see details at 100% zoom level.
3. You can also try to adjust the filter settings a bit. For example, try to vary Noise Reduction Amounts:
Luminance control and see how that affects the preview.

Stage IV. Apply the filter

1. Switch to the Output Image tab:


2. Wait until the progress indicator disappears.
Processing may take a few seconds. Then the filtered output image is displayed. Click the output image to
compare it with the input image. Zoom in to better see details at 100% zoom level. Notice that the noise
has been significantly reduced throughout the image while the image details have been preserved.

You can process your own images in a similar fashion as well. Neat Image can perform similar noise
reduction on images captured or acquired by any digital camera (or scanner) working in any mode. To
be able to do that Neat Image needs a device noise profile describing the properties of noise produced
by the corresponding device. Neat Image can build such a profile on the fly using the Auto Profile function.
Also, you can find ready-made noise profiles for many cameras and scanners in the Profiles section of the
Neat Image web page (you will find more details on that later in the document).
The next sections Filtration process details, page 11, and Device noise profiles, page 26 contain detailed
descriptions of the filtration and profiling processes. There are also examples of profiling and filtration in
the Neat Image web page: https://ni.neatvideo.com/examples

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

4. Filtration process details


Neat Image can be used to filter a single image or
to automatically process multiple images. This
section describes the single image workflow.
Processing multiple images is detailed in the Batch
processing section, page 43.
The main window of Neat Image and its Editor
tab (see on the right, this will be called Editor in
this guide) is usually used to process one image.
When you start Neat Image for the very first time,
this window opens automatically in the Editor tab:

The filtration process is described below as a sequence of stages that need to be done to process one
image.

4.1. Stage I. Open an input image

Use the Input Image tab:

To open an input image

Click (the Open input image button) in the toolbar or use the File > Open Input Image. . .
menu item. Select an image that you want to process.
The supported file formats are JPEG, TIFF and PNG (see Requirements, page 5, for more information
about supported file formats).
Drag an image file from the Windows Explorer and drop it to the image viewer in Neat Image.
Use the Edit > Paste menu item to copy-and-paste an image from another application to Neat Image
through the clipboard.1
When the input image is ready, the Input Image box (in the
right panel) displays the full name of the image. If the image
contains the metadata (such as EXIF) then the optional
Image Metadata box shows the available details such as camera
model, ISO rate, compression and other relevant parameters
present in the metadata. Only those parameters are displayed
that could be extracted from the input image and that are
important for noise reduction.

To scroll and pan the image


press the middle mouse button and then drag the image using the mouse;
press the spacebar and the left mouse button and then drag the image using the mouse.

1 Please note that copy and pasting an image does not copy the image metadata (such as EXIF) which may be important for
Neat Image noise reduction (in particular, for profile matching). In cases when the image metadata is significant, consider opening
an image file manually or drag and drop it instead of copy and pasting via the clipboard.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

To change zoom level


use the mouse wheel when the mouse pointer is over the viewer;
use the zoom control under the viewer;
use the Ctrl-Plus, Ctrl-Minus, Ctrl-0 (zero), Ctrl-Alt-0 (zero) keyboard shortcuts.

4.2. Stage II. Prepare a device noise profile


To filter the input image, Neat Image needs to know the characteristics of noise produced by the image
acquisition device (digital camera, scanner, etc.) that the image comes from. The noise characteristics of a
device working in a certain mode constitute a device noise profile.
There are several ways to prepare a noise profile for the input image:
1. Auto Profile: to build a new profile by analyzing the input image itself
(or a specially prepared test image);
2. Auto Match: to automatically select the most suitable device noise profile from a pre-built set of
profiles (when such a set is available);
3. Smart Profile:
to use both Auto Profile and Auto Match (with optional Auto Fine-Tune) to prepare two
candidate profiles and then automatically select the better of two profiles;
4. Load Profile: to manually select a suitable profile from a pre-built set of profiles
(when such a set is available).
The first option is often the easiest one provided the input image contains uniform featureless areas that
include noise but no visible or important details.1 Auto Profile will try to automatically find such image areas
and analyze them to build a noise profile. When the image does contain featureless areas, this automatic
way of preparing a noise profile is the most accurate and therefore recommended. If the input image
includes no such areas, another image with featureless areas can be used to build a profile (provided both
images come from the same source and therefore contain the noise with the same properties).
The other options are available once you already have a pre-built set of profiles. You can prepare such a
set yourself or find some profile sets built by other users of the same camera or scanner. You can find more
information about profiles and profiling in the Device noise profiles section, page 26.
Again, using Auto Profile is often the simplest and fastest way to prepare an accurate noise profile, so below
this method is described first.

Auto Profile: build a new profile using the input image

Make sure you have switched to the Device Noise Profile tab:

Click (the Auto Profile button) in the toolbar, or use the Profile > Auto Profile with Regular
Image menu item, or press F2.
function will find and select an area for main analysis. Neat Image will then automatically
Auto Profile
analyze the noise in that area to build a new noise profile. It will then analyze the rest of the image as
well, but the most important part of the analysis is the area highlighted by the selection. Which is why
it is important to visually control that area selected by Auto Profile.
In difficult cases, Neat Image may be not able to find a large enough, uniform enough and featureless
enough area in the image. You will then notice that the area selected by Auto Profile, for example,
contains some important details, not just noise. In such cases, Neat Image also warns you that the
area is not very suitable for analysis. It may say that the selected area is not uniform in one or more
channels, or is too small, or contains clipping in one or more channels.
One way to address that is to manually move the selection (or resize, or draw a new one) to an area
that does not contain any visible details and then click the same Auto Profile button again. To find the
most suitable area, use the Assist mode of the image viewer to better see weak details that may be
preset in the candidate image areas.
1 You can see some examples of featureless image areas in the Examples section, page 58.

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Alternatively, you can just ignore those warnings, but the quality of the resulting noise profile may be
lower than it could in principle be with that image. The filter will still work though.
After the profile is built, check the Profile Quality indicator in the Device Noise Profile box. A profile built
using a large, uniform and featureless image area will show a high value there. If the profile quality is
high (for example, higher than 70%) then you can be sure that the noise profile is accurate. In this case,
consider the noise profile ready and proceed to Stage III. Adjust filter settings, page 14.
If the quality is not high or you clearly see that the area used for analysis contains some details, try
to find another uniform image area and use Auto Profile again. It is usually best to select the most noisy
area for analysis.
That may not help still, especially if the image contains only a few featureless areas. In this case,
consider building a noise profile using an alternative image or a special test image prepared with
the Calibration Target. Please see the Device noise profiles section, page 26, to learn how to use the
Calibration Target to build noise profiles. You can also try to load some pre-built profile using one of
the methods described below.

Auto Match: select matching noise profile from a pre-built profile set
This option can only be used if you already have a pre-built set of profiles. You can prepare such a set
yourself or find some pre-built profile online.

Click (the Auto Match button) or use the Profile > Auto Match menu item.
The Auto Match function uses the EXIF data fields of the input image to automatically select and load
the device noise profile that matches the device mode of the image. The most matching profile is
selected from profiles stored in the Profile folder. By default, this folder is in your Documents folder1 :
DocumentsNeat Image v8 StandaloneProfiles
Auto Matchwill look for matching profiles in that folder as well as all its subfolders (where you can
place profiles built by you or downloaded from the Internet).
After a profile is loaded by Auto Match, the degree of match between the current input image and loaded
noise profile is displayed in the Device Noise Profile box. Higher Match values mean better match, leading
to more accurate filtration.

Smart Profile: prepare two profiles and select the better one
Use the Profile > Smart Profile menu item (or press the F5 key).
Smart Profile uses both Auto Profile and Auto Match (with Auto Fine-Tune) to prepare two candidate profiles
and then selects the better of two profiles. For Smart Profile to be fully efficient, the input image must
contain flat featureless areas with noise for Auto Profile to analyze, and also there must be several
pre-built profiles to let Auto Match find the most matching noise profile, as described above. You can
adjust settings of Smart Profile function in Preferences.

Load Profile: manually select a noise profile from a pre-built profile set

Click (the Load Profile button) or use the Profile > Load Profile. . . menu item. Then
select a profile in the Load Device Noise Profile dialog.
or

Click (the drop-down button) in the Device Noise Profile box to open the popup menu with all
available profiles and then select one of the available profiles.
Please note that you must either build your own profiles or download some pre-built profiles and
place them to Neat Images Profile folder to make this drop-down button and popup menu truly work. By
default the Profile folder is located in your Documents folder 2 :
DocumentsNeat Image v8 StandaloneProfiles
1 You can check and adjust the location of that folder using the menu Tools > Preferences > Matching.
2 You can check and adjust the location of the Profile folder using the menu Tools > Preferences > Folders.

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If you build or download some pre-built profiles, place them to the above folder (unzip the downloaded
ZIP archive to that folder). Neat Image will recognize and display those profiles in the popup menu to
help you quickly load any of them when needed.
When manually selecting a profile for an input image, use the profile file names and sub-folder
structure to guide your search. See Preparing profile set for different device modes: Stage III. Structuring
profile set, page 36, for more information on profile set structuring.

To additionally fine-tune the manually loaded or matched profile


You may want to additionally fine-tune the profile after it has been loaded either automatically (using
Auto Match) or manually (using Load Profile). Fine-tuning the profile to the current image usually makes
the profile more accurate and better reflecting the images noise properties. Please note that you do
not need to fine-tune a profile if you have just built it using Auto Profile. Auto Profile automatically applies
fine-tuning so you do not need to repeat that operation. However if you load an existing profile instead
of building a new one, fine-tuning such a loaded profile can be very useful.

Click (the Auto Fine-Tune button) or use the Profile > Auto Fine-Tune menu item to
fine-tune the profile to the current input image.
There is no need to select any area in the input image because Auto Fine-Tune automatically analyzes the
whole image.
Once you have loaded the profile that matches the input image or you have just built a new profile
specifically for the current input image, proceed to process the image in the Stages III-V below.

4.3. Stage III. Adjust filter settings


As soon as the noise profile is ready you can use the noise and sharpening filters. These filters have
several adjustable settings. The default settings usually produce good results (provided the noise profile is
accurate). You may want to additionally vary the filter settings to achieve the filtration results that look
best to your eyes.

Switch to the Noise Filter Settings tab:

4.3.1. Use preview when adjusting filter settings


The image viewer in the Noise Filter Settings tab shows a part of the image processed by the noise and
sharpening filters. When you change any filter settings, the preview is automatically updated. You can
zoom in and out, drag, scroll and pan the image to see how the filtration affects different parts of the
image. If you manually select an area in the image then only that area will be processed for preview. That
can also be faster than processing the whole visible area, so if you work on a slower machine, try selecting
a smaller area for preview. The simplest way to do that is to double-click the image in the area of interest:
Neat Image will then add a selection around that point.
When the preview is ready (the preview area shows Filtered), you can click inside that preview area to
temporarily switch back to the original for comparison.

4.3.2. Beginner and Advanced modes


Neat Image has two sets of filter controls available in Beginner mode and Advanced mode. You can select the
mode using the Tools > Beginner mode and Tools > Advanced Mode menu items or using the dedicated Beginner
mode and Advanced Mode menu in the top right corner of Neat Images window.

The Beginner mode provides a simplified control set recommended for beginners who have just started using
Neat Image. The Advanced Mode provides the most complete control set with the maximum control over
the noise profiling and filtration processes. The Advanced Mode offers several additional filter options and
modes that help to achieve better noise reduction results.
We recommend to start with the simplified control set of the Beginner mode and later switch to the Advanced
Mode to be able to utilize Neat Image to its full potential.

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Adjusting filter settings in Beginner Mode and Advanced Mode is described in two separate sub-sections below.
For Beginner mode please follow the sub-section Stage IV (a). Beginner Mode below.
If you want to jump right to the most complete control set in Advanced Mode then please instead follow the
sub-section Stage IV (b). Advanced Mode, page 17.

4.4. Stage IV (a). Beginner Mode


Please make sure Filter Settings panel is switched to the Filter tab.

4.4.1. Beginner Mode: Adjusting filter settings


There are two main filters in Neat Image: noise reduction filter and sharpening filter. These two filters can
be used together and each of them can be used independently. You can enable, disable and adjust these
filters using the guidelines in the subsections below.

Filter

The noise filter itself has two main settings (when working
in Beginner Mode): Noise Level and Noise Reduction Amount.
The Noise Level setting is a threshold determining which
image elements are considered noise and which elements
are considered true details. The Noise Reduction Amount setting
determines how much reduction is applied to the elements
identified as noise.

Use the Noise Reduction Amount: Luminance control to adjust


the amount of noise reduction applied to the noise in the
luminance component of the image data.
This control is the most important and most frequently adjusted setting of the noise filter. The
higher this setting, the more of the detected noise is removed in the luminance component. Be careful,
setting the noise reduction amount too high may lead to loss of fine details and/or unnaturally looking
(over-smooth, plastic-like) results. Too low amounts may be not enough to sufficiently reduce the
objectionable part of the noise. The default value of 60% usually provides a good balance between
noise removal and preserving natural (not over-processed) appearance of filtered image. Try to adjust
the setting up and down to get the results that look best to your eyes.

Use the Noise Level control to adjust the setting (only when necessary).

Please note that if the noise profile is accurate,1 then it is not necessary to adjust this setting. However,
if the noise profile is not accurate or it was built for a different image, then the noise filter may need
an adjusted estimation of the actual noise level to be able to work correctly. By adjusting the Noise
Level setting, you provide the filter with such an adjusted estimation. Use the preview to visually guide
yourself when making such adjustments. The right adjustment will leave no noise elements in the
image yet will not destroy the actual details.
It is best to gradually increase the noise level and watch the preview to find the point where most the
noise elements are already reduced and the details are still preserved. If you go beyond that point, then
some details may be lost too, so make sure you do not set the noise level unnecessarily high.

1 Use the Quality indicator in the Device Noise Profile box (in the Device Noise Profile tab) to estimate the accuracy of the profile. The
indicator shows how accurate and complete is the noise analysis itself. Higher values usually lead to more accurate noise reduction.
Also pay attention to the Match indicator: it should either show a high value or there should be the (AP) sign indicating that the
profile has been built by Auto Profile using this very image. That ensures that the profile is not only accurate but it also matches the
input image.

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Sharpening (optional)

The sharpening filter in Neat Image increases the sharpness of image details without increasing the noise
strength.
The sharpening filter is disabled by default. You can enable it and adjust the sharpening amounts separately
for three typical scales of details: fine, medium-sized and large.
Like any sharpening method, try to balance the amount of sharpening to avoid over-sharpening.
Use the Sharpening: Fine, Medium and Large sliders to adjust
the amount of sharpening applied to the image details of
the corresponding sizes.
It is best to start with adjusting the Fine sharpening
amount. If sharpening the fine details alone is not
sufficient to make the image look sharp, then try to increase the Medium and Large settings too.

Use preview

While adjusting the settings, use the available preview facilities to evaluate the corresponding changes in
the results of Neat Image processing:
Click inside the preview area to temporarily switch back to the original image for comparison;
Move the preview area from one part of the image to another to see how the Neat Image processing
affects different image content;
Create several alternative variants of filtration, compare results and select the best variant. For
more information on using variants please see the Variants of filtration section, page 40.

4.4.2. Beginner Mode: Optimize performance settings (optional)


Before applying the filter to the image (especially if that is only one of many images in a large batch), you
may want to measure the processing speed on that image and potentially improve the speed by optimizing
the performance settings of Neat Image. This is entirely optional but in some cases, the optimization can
appreciably reduce the time of batch processing.
It is generally a good idea to optimize the performance settings when you run Neat Image on that specific
computer for the very first time, to adapt the filter to the current hardware (the CPUs and GPUs available
in that machine).
To check the current speed and to optimize the performance settings switch to the Performance tab in the
Filter Settings box.

To measure the filter speed click


Neat Image will run a test and will then display the
measured processing speed based on the current filter
settings (as shown in the text field in the Performance tab).

To optimize the performance settings click


to open the Performance tab in Neat Image Preferences. In
that tab, you can inspect the available and current CPU
and GPU settings.

Then click to open a specialized


dialog designed to measure image processing speeds
achieved with different combinations of the CPU and
GPU settings. It allows to automatically benchmark all
possible combinations of those settings and to identify

the best combination (for the current hardware and current filter settings). You can then just click
to apply the found optimal combination achieving the best performance.

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Once you have completed this step, please proceed to the section Stage IV. Apply filter to the input image,
page 24.
Or if you want to switch to the Advanced Mode and adjust the filters using the most complete set of controls
please proceed to the next sub-section dedicated to the Advanced Mode.

4.5. Stage IV (b). Advanced Mode


As said in the previous sections, Neat Image has two sets of filter controls, that are available in the Beginner
mode and Advanced mode (you can select the mode using the Tools > Beginner mode and Tools > Advanced Mode
menu items).
The Beginner mode described earlier provides a simplified control set recommended for beginners who
have just started using Neat Image. The Advanced Mode provides the most complete control set with the
maximum control over the noise profiling and filtration processes. The Advanced Mode offers several
additional filter options and modes that help to achieve better noise reduction results.
It is usually best to start learning Neat Image using the simplified control set of the Beginner mode and later
switch to the Advanced Mode to be able to utilize Neat Image to its full potential.
If you want to use the Advanced mode then please follow this sub-section, otherwise skip it and proceed to
page 23 for the next stage.
As compared with the Beginner mode, the Advanced mode offers a more extensive set of filter controls. There
are also several quality modes allowing to opt for higher quality of image processing over processing
speed or the other way around.

4.5.1. Advanced Mode: Selecting Quality Mode


Please make sure Filter Settings panel is switched to the Filter
tab.
The first setting available in the Filter tab is the Quality Mode,
which is a global setting affecting the way all or most
parts of the filter work. Quality Mode determines whether
Neat Image should generally work more accurately (but
somewhat slower) or somewhat less accurately (but
significantly faster).
By default, Quality Mode is set to High, which provides a good
balance between processing speed and the visual quality
of results. There are also Highest (slower) and Normal (faster)
modes.

Use the Quality Mode control to select the preferred processing mode.
While adjusting the Quality Mode, observe how the preview progress indicator (the green bar at the top
of the preview area) is updating to get an idea of expected processing speed in each processing mode.
You may not immediately notice the difference in visual quality in preview but the speed difference
should be immediately obvious.
If the preview is updating too slowly, you do not necessarily have to decrease the Quality Mode. You can
simply zoom into the image or manually select a smaller part of the image to limit the preview to that
smaller area. Then the preview will update faster.
Preview has to update in many situations: when you change any filter settings, move the selected
area to another part of the image, zoom in or out, etc. Therefore it is important to make those updates
comfortably fast.
Once you find a comfortable way to evaluate the preview results, proceed to the next steps to adjust the
actual filters.

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4.5.2. Advanced Mode: Adjusting filter settings


There are several sections in the Filter tab. Most of the sections are related to the noise reduction filter
and the last section is about sharpening. Most of the sections can be enabled or disabled individually to
achieve the desired results in different image processing situations.

Filter

In Advanced Mode, the main noise filter has separate settings


for all (spatial) frequency1 and channel components of the
image data. There are pairs of noise level noise reduction
amount controls for each of these components. You have
access to eight such pairs three for channel components
(Luminance, Cr, Cb) and five for spatial frequency components
(High, Mid, Low, Very Low, Ultra Low) of the image data.
The meaning of each noise level noise reduction amount
pair is the following:
the noise level control adjusts the threshold
determining which elements of the corresponding
image component are considered noise and which
elements are considered true details;
the noise reduction amount control determines how
much reduction is applied to the elements identified
as noise in that component.
Thus, with a noise level noise reduction amount pair of
settings you can adjust what should be considered noise in
a component of the image data and how much of that noise
should be reduced.
The noise level settings are relative and are based on the
noise levels of the current noise profile. Because the noise
level controls are relative to the measured levels of the
noise profile, the default filter settings usually produce good
results as long as the noise profile is accurate.2

1 See What is frequency question in page 61.


2 Use the Quality indicator in the Device Noise Profile box (in the Device Noise Profile tab) to estimate the accuracy of the profile. The
indicator shows how accurate and complete is the noise profile itself. Higher values usually lead to more accurate noise reduction.
Also pay attention to the Match indicator: it should either show a high value or there should be the (AP) sign indicating that the
profile has been built by Auto Profile using this very image. That ensures that the profile is not only accurate but it also matches the
input image.

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Noise Reduction Amount1

Noise reduction amounts are the most frequently adjusted settings of the noise filter.
Use the Noise Reduction Amount > Luminance; and Noise Reduction Amount > Components > Cr, Cb; High, Mid, Low,
Very Low, Ultra Low sliders.

You can vary the noise reduction amount for each frequency
and channel component of the image data. The higher a
certain noise reduction amount is, the more of the detected
noise is removed in the corresponding component.
Noise reduction amounts can be in the range from 0% (none
of the detected noise is removed) to 100% (all the detected
noise is removed). By default, the noise filter removes 60%
in the Luminance channel and 80% in the Cr, Cb channels (you
can always change the defaults if necessary2 ).
Be careful: setting the noise reduction amounts too high,
especially in the Luminance channel, may lead to loss of fine
details and/or unnaturally looking (over-smooth, plastic-like)
results. Too low amounts may be not enough to sufficiently
reduce the objectionable part of the noise. Try to balance the
noise reduction amounts (most importantly, the amount of
noise reduction in the Luminance channel) to get the results
that look best to your eyes.

Decreasing the noise reduction amounts can have a positive effect


As human vision is not very
if the image contains some natural noise. For example, when
sensitive to variations of
you work with an image showing asphalt, sand, or anything else
colors, strong filtration in the
that contains fine natural noise-like features, it may be helpful
chrominance channels (Cr, Cb)
to reduce the amounts at least for some of the components (for
does not noticeably distort image,
example, Luminance).
but efficiently reduces color noise.

Filter Tuning Mode (optional)

is a special option, which facilitates


Filter Tuning Mode
adjustment of other filter settings by helping to better
see the influence of other settings in preview. It is not
necessary to use this option, but it may help to speed up
the adjustment process as a whole.
If you enable Filter Tuning Mode, then all noise reduction
amounts will be temporarily increased to a higher Amount
value (the specific value of that special Amount can be
adjusted here as well). That makes it easier to see the
difference caused by adjustments in other settings such
as Noise Level, Artifact Removal, Detail Recovery and other filter
settings available in Advanced Mode and described further in
this section.
If you enable Filter Tuning Mode and then proceed to adjust
the other settings, do not forget to disable this option after
you have completed those adjustments.

1 We recommend disabling the sharpening filter when adjusting the noise filter. This can make the influence of adjustments easier to
see in preview.
2 You can adjust the filter settings and then save them as a new default preset using the menu Filter > Set As Default Preset. . .

Also see the description of the Default Filter Preset setting in Neat Image Preferences, page 50.

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Noise Level (optional)

Usually it is not necessary to change the noise level settings if the noise profile is accurate. You only
need to adjust the noise levels if you see in preview that some noise elements are not reduced by the
filter even if you increase the noise reduction amounts. Such incomplete reduction is usually caused by
an inaccurate noise profile providing inaccurate noise level estimations to the noise filter. This may be
compensated by adjusting (increasing) the noise levels in the filter settings.
Use the Noise Level > Luminance, Cr, Cb; High, Mid, Low, Very
Low, Ultra Low sliders.

The noise filter is applied to the five frequency


components and the three channel components of the
image data. Corresponding sliders adjust the estimated
noise levels for each of these components.
The higher a certain noise level is, the more elements in
the corresponding component are considered noise. Be
careful: setting a noise level too high can lead to removal
of true details. Setting it too low can lead to incomplete
filtration: residual noise and compression artifacts can
stay in the filtered image.
As a rule, if the device noise profile has been built
properly, it is not necessary to increase the noise levels
by more than 50%. If the image contains strong surges
of noise in the high frequency range, it is recommended
to increase the high frequency noise level up to +20 to
40% and/or use the artifact filter (see below).
If the image contains strong color noise, it is
recommended to increase the Cr and Cb noise levels
to +30% or more. In some cases, it may be useful to
increase these noise levels up to +100%.

If adjusting noise levels still does not help and some noise elements remain in the filtered image, probably
the device noise profile is not good at all. Return to Stage V. Prepare a device noise profile, page 12, and
additionally fine-tune the noise profile or simply rebuild it from scratch.

Artifact Removal (optional)

Neat Image has an additional filter to remove residual


dot-like and line-like noise elements that may remain
in image even after applying Neat Images regular
noise filters. Such residual noise elements / artifacts
are typically created by in-camera noise reduction and
compression or by other post-processing. Neat Images
noise reduction can make those elements more visible
if the noise levels are under-estimated during profiling.
You can see an example of such digital artifacts in the
first picture on the right. The second picture shows the results of noise reduction with the Artifact Removal
filter enabled.
Such artifacts are usually of digital nature. They are typically of very small size yet they are different from
the regular random noise, so they require special treatment provided by the Artifact Removal filter.
You can enable and adjust this filter using the following controls in the Filter > Artifact Removal section:

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Use the Dots control to adjust the dot removal threshold.


Higher values lead to stronger reduction of dot-like
artifacts (less attention to details); lower values lead
to weaker reduction (more attention to details).
Use the Lines control to adjust the line removal threshold.
Higher values lead to stronger reduction of line-like
artifacts (less attention to details); lower values lead to
weaker reduction (more attention to details).
The artifact filter additionally offers separate thresholds for three frequency components (in other words,
for three typical size scales) in the Frequencies sub-section: high, mid, low.
Use the High, Mid and Low controls to adjust the artifact removal thresholds in the corresponding
frequency components.
Higher values lead to stronger reduction of artifacts (less attention to details); lower values lead to
weaker reduction (more attention to details).

Detail Recovery (optional)

This option allows to recover some of the fine details which might be weakened or lost due to image
editing, compression, noisiness of the original image, using a less accurate noise profile, etc. The Detail
Recovery function is particularly useful when you need to preserve and recover partially lost repeated
patterns such as brick walls, rug patterns, cloth textures, ripples, etc.
This option is available only in the Highest quality mode and it makes processing somewhat slower.
Enable the Detail Recovery section.
The Sensitivity setting is a threshold that determines what
should be considerered true details (as compared with
noise elements) and therefore recovered by the filter.
Positive values of Sensitivity make the filter detect and
recover more details. Negative values make it more
conservative so it recovers fewer image elements.
You can also use the High, Mid and Low controls to adjust the sensitivity for the individual frequency
components of the image.
Keep in mind that setting the Detail Recovery controls too high can lead to incomplete filtration: residial
noise and compression artifacts can stay in the filtered image. Setting these controls too low can lead
to insufficient recovery of useful details. Try to find the right balance based on visual inspection of
preview.
Use the Amount control to set the strength of Detail Recovery. The higher the Amount setting the stronger
recovery of the detected details. Lower values produce weaker recovery effect.

Edge Smoothing (optional)

This option of the noise filter makes smoother the edges of


the objects in the image. This can be useful when edges are
significantly degraded by the noise (or by the in-camera
noise reduction and sharpening) and it is preferable to
restore them.
Enable the Edge Smoothing section to enable this option in general.
Use the High, Mid and Low controls to adjust the strength of edge smoothing in the corresponding
frequency components of the image. Higher values lead to stronger smoothing of edges; lower values
lead to less smoothing.

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Sharpening (optional)

The sharpening filter in Neat Image increases sharpness of the details in the image without increasing the
noise strength.
The sharpening filter is disabled by default. You can enable it and adjust the sharpening amounts separately
for three frequency components (for three typical size scales): High, Mid, Low.
Use the Sharpening: High, Mid and Low sliders to adjust
the amount of sharpening applied to the details of the
corresponding size.
0% will not sharpen the component at all. 100% is
the normal and 250% is the maximum strength of
sharpening in each component.
It is best to start with adjusting the amount of sharpening
applied to the High frequency component. If that
sharpening alone is not sufficient, try to increase the
Mid and Low settings too.

Like any sharpening method, try to balance the amount of sharpening to avoid over-sharpening.
You can also adjust sharpening amounts separately for three channel components Luminance and Cr / Cb
(chrominance components):
Use the Sharpening > Channels > Luminance, Cr and Cb sliders to adjust the amount of sharpening applied
to the corresponding channel components.
You can also enable the dedicated option that prevents over-sharpening:
Use the Sharpening > Prevent Over-Sharpening option to use a higher-quality sharpening method, which
tries to prevent over-sharpening and to avoid creating a halo around details.

Use preview

While adjusting the settings, use the available preview facilities to evaluate the corresponding changes in
the results of Neat Image filtration:
Click inside the preview area to temporarily switch back to the original image for comparison;
Move the preview area from one part of the image to another to see how the Neat Image processing
affects different image content;

Use (Viewer mode button) in the viewer toolbar to switch to different viewer modes
and to inspect the individial components of the image. Examine channel and frequency components,
check the presence of noise in individual components. Identify those components that do not get
enough (or get too much) noise reduction and adjust the corresponding filter settings;
Create several alternative variants of filtration, compare results and select the best variant. For
more information on using variants please see the Variants of filtration section, page 40.

If you enabled Filter Tuning Mode to facilitate adjustments of the filter settings, make sure you have disabled
that mode now.

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4.5.3. Advanced Mode: Optimize performance (optional)


Before applying the filter to the image (especially if that is only one of many images in a large batch), you
may want to measure the processing speed on that image and potentially improve the speed by optimizing
the performance settings of Neat Image.
It is generally a good idea to optimize the performance settings when you run Neat Image on that specific
computer for the very first time, to adapt the filter to the current hardware (the CPUs and GPUs available
in that machine).
The processing speed may also depend on the filter settings: enabling more filters makes processing
slower because Neat Image has to do more work. Also, if you significantly change the filter settings,
then the optimal performance settings (for example, the number of CPU cores and/or GPUs used for
processing) may change as well, so it may be useful to optimize those settings before starting a large batch
where many images are going to be processed using the same settings. This is entirely optional but in
some cases, the optimization can appreciably reduce the time of batch processing.
To check the current speed and to optimize the performance
settings switch to the Performance tab in the Filter Settings box.

To measure the filter speed click in the


bottom of the Performance tab.
Neat Image will run a test and will then display the
measured processing speed based on the current filter
settings (as shown in the text field above).

To optimize the performance settings click


to open the Performance tab in Neat Image Preferences.
In that tab, you can inspect the available performance
options as well as the current CPU and GPU settings.

Then click to open a specialized


dialog designed to measure image processing speeds
achieved with different combinations of the CPU and
GPU settings. It allows to automatically benchmark all
possible combinations of settings and to identify the best
combination (for the current filter settings).

You can then just click to apply the found optimal combination achieving the
best performance.

4.6. Stage V. Save filter settings into a preset (optional)


This sub-section is entirely optional yet you may want to consider saving the current filter settings into a
preset on the disk to be able to re-load the same customized filter settings in another image, in the same or
another project.

To save the filter settings into a preset

Click (the Save current filter settings as a preset. . . button) in the Filter Settings box or use the Filter > Save
Filter Preset. . .menu item.
In the Save Filter Preset As dialog box, specify the name of the file to save the preset. The filter presets
are stored in *.nfp files.
The saved filter preset includes all settings of Neat Images noise filter, all its specialized sub-sections and
options, as well as the sharpening settings. By re-opening a preset later on, you can reproduce exactly
the same filter settings. Together, a pair of device noise profile and filter preset can be used to accurately
reproduce the filtration results.
You can also add some text comments to your custom preset using the Preset Description dialog:

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Use to open the Preset Description dialog and add or edit the description of the preset.

The text comments are also saved into the preset on the disk when you use .

To load a previously saved filter preset

Click (the Load filter settings from a preset. . . button) in the Filter Settings box or use the Filter > Load Filter
Preset. . . menu item. In the Load Filter Preset dialog box, locate and select the filter preset to be loaded.
or

Click (the drop-down button) in the Filter Settings box to open the popup menu with all available
presets and then select one of them.
There are several pre-written filter presets in your Documents folder:1
DocumentsNeat Image v8 StandalonePresets
Please try to load those pre-written presets to see what combinations of the filter settings and their values
can be used to solve typical tasks. The names of the groups of presets and names of presets themselves
explain those tasks. Also, when loading any of the pre-written filter presets supplied with Neat Image,
the Preset Description dialog opens automatically2 to display the description of the preset being loaded. The
description is intended to help you get a better understanding of the purpose, applicability and possible
side effects of the preset.
There are two main groups of pre-written presets: General and Advanced. The presets in the first group can
be used in both Beginner mode and Advanced Mode. The presets in the second group can only be used when
Neat Image is in Advanced Mode, so loading such a preset will switch Neat Image to Advanced Mode (if you
currently use Neat Image in Beginner Mode).

4.7. Stage VI. Apply filter to the input image

Switch to the Output Image tab:


This will automatically start the filtration process and Neat Image will process the whole input image.
Processing may take some time (from seconds to minutes, depending on the speed of your computer
and size of the image).
When the filtration is completed, you can compare the output and input images. Click the output
image to temporarily switch between the output and input images for comparison.
If the filtration result is not satisfactory, please return to Stage III, page 14, to change some of the filter
settings, or to Stage II, page 12, to build a new or improve the current noise profile to make it better
match the noise of the input image.
In Pro version, you can optionally select a different bitdepth of the output image using the Filter Output
box. The output bitdepth can be made different from that of the input image. In such a case, the input
image will be internally converted to the output bitdepth during processing.

1 You can check and adjust the location of the Preset folder: use the menu Tools > Preferences > Folders > Preset folder.
2 You can disable displaying that dialog using the checkbox in the bottom of the Preset Description dialog (and re-enable it later in
Neat Image Preferences if necessary).

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4.8. Stage VII. Save the output image


Click (the Save output image button) in the toolbar or use the File > Save Output Image
As. . . menu item.

The available output file formats are: JPEG, TIFF and PNG (see the Requirements subsection, page 5,
for more details).
When saving in the PNG format, you can select the compression level: 0 is for the lowest compression / large
file size and 9 is for the highest compression / smallest file size.
When saving in the JPEG format, you can select the compression quality. The last used compression
quality value is always used as the current default.
Neat Image uses 4:1:1 subsampling with the JPEG quality lower than 85. If the JPEG quality is set to
85 or higher then subsampling is not used.
or
You can also use the clipboard to export the filtration results to another application. Use the Edit > Copy
menu item for that purpose. An image put on the clipboard will be in 24-bit RGB format.

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5. Device noise profiles


A device noise profile (or noise profile, or simply profile) describes the properties of noise produced by
an imaging device (e.g., digital camera, scanner, etc.) working in a certain mode. Several noise profiles
corresponding to different modes of a device constitute a profile set. Neat Image can use profiles from
such a set to process images produced in any of the modes covered by the set.
You can find some pre-built noise profiles or build your own profiles for your camera or scanner. Learn
how to find, build and use device noise profiles in Neat Image in the subsections below.

5.1. Getting ready-made noise profiles


You can find some free profile sets for different cameras and scanners in:
Profiles section of the Neat Image web page:
https://ni.neatvideo.com/download/noise-profiles
Device noise profiles section of the Neat Image community forum:
http://www.neatimage.net/forum/viewforum.php?f=5
Other digital imaging forums and web pages where users of Neat Image may publish their profiles.
To use a profile set from one of these sources, download the archive with profiles and unzip all profiles to
the following folder 1 and/or its sub-folder(s) in your Documents folder:
DocumentsNeat Image v8 StandaloneProfiles
After that you can use individual profiles from this set in Neat Image to process images produced in device
modes covered by this profile set.
Please be aware that using ready-made profiles built by other people may produce less than optimal results
with your images because of possible slight differences in noise properties of cameras (scanners) as well
as due to differences in imaging processing workflows used. Therefore, we advise to use ready-made
noise profiles built by others only as a starting point to learn how to use Neat Image. To achieve the best
results consider building your own profiles using the procedures described in the subsections below.

5.2. Building a profile for a device mode (standard profiling


procedure)
In this subsection, you will find out how to build a single noise profile for an image produced in a certain
shooting mode of a camera or a scanning mode of a scanner (such a profile can also be called a profile for
a certain mode of the device).
Building a new noise profile generally consists of three stages:
Stage I. Building a profile;
Stage II. Documenting the profile;
Stage III. Saving the profile.
The Stage I, building a profile, can be done using a regular image (for example, the image that you want
to denoise or any other regular image) or using an image of the Calibration Target (a special test chart
facilitating profiling). These two cases are described as two alternative versions of the Stage I:
Stage I. Case of building a profile using a regular image
Stage I. Case of building a profile using the Calibration Target
You may want to follow the case of building a noise profile using a regular image if you want to build
a one-time-use noise profile to process one specific input image. In this case, the input image (or an
alternative regular image from the same series, that is produced by the same device working in the same
mode) should contain some uniform featureless areas for noise analysis.
A uniform area (with minor brightness variation in all channels of the image) may be overcast sky
(without visually distinguishable clouds), clear sky (without clouds and birds), or any other part of the
1 You can check and adjust the location of the Profile folder using the menu Tools > Preferences > Folders.

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image containing no visually perceptible details (except the noise). Neat Image needs uniform featureless
areas of around 128x128 pixels or more (up to 512x512 pixels; larger is better), the minimum is 32x32
pixels. You can see some examples of such areas in the Examples section, page 58.
If the input image does not contain such areas and you have no suitable alternative regular image that
contains such areas, you can prepare a special test image and follow the case of building a noise profile
using the Calibration Target. That is also recommended if you want to prepare a reusable noise profile for
a certain mode of your camera or scanner.

5.2.1. Stage I. Case of building a profile using a regular image


To build a noise profile using a regular image you must take 2 steps:
Step 1. Preparing a regular image for noise analysis;
Step 2. Analyzing the image noise.

Step 1. Preparing a regular image for noise analysis


To analyze noise in a regular image, you can use the input image or an alternative regular image that
was produced by the same camera (or scanner) in the same or similar shooting (scanning) mode. Using
the input image itself usually produces the most accurate noise profile that perfectly matches the noise
properties of the input image. However, if there are not enough flat featureless areas in the input image,
then you may have to use an alternative regular image.

Case of using the input image

In this case, simply stay with the input image that is already opened in the Editor tab. The input image is
displayed in both the Input Image and Device Noise Profile tabs.
To build a profile, switch to the Device Noise Profile tab and proceed to the step 2 below.

Case of using an alternative image

If there is no large enough uniform featureless areas in the input image, use an alternative image. The
alternative image is supposed to be produced by the same device working in the same or similar mode.
This can be just another image from the same series; the image should contain at least one large enough
uniform featureless area suitable for analysis.

To open the alternative image:

Click (the Open input image button) in the toolbar or use the File > Open Input Image. . .
menu item. Select an image to be used for profiling.
Drag an image file from Windows Explorer and drop it to the image viewer in Neat Image.
Use the Edit > Paste menu item to copy-and-paste an image from another application to Neat Image
through the clipboard.
Use the loaded alternative image to build a noise profile in the step 2 below. Then load the original input
image back to process it using the newly built profile.

Step 2. Analyzing image noise (profiling)


Analyzing noise is the main part of building a noise profile for an imaging device working in a certain
mode. The current version of Neat Image standalone (Win) offers three ways of conducting the noise
analysis (profiling): automatic, semi-automatic and manual one. Using automatic profiling is easier and
therefore recommended for beginners. In difficult cases (for example if Neat Image cannot automatically
find a uniform featureless area in an analyzed image), automatic profiling may not work well or may
produce less than perfect results. You can always override automatics and use semi-automatic or manual
profiling.

Make sure you use the Device Noise Profile tab:

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Case of automatic profiling

To analyze noise properties, Neat Image uses uniform image areas that contain noise but no visible or
important details. With automatic profiling, Neat Image tries to find one such area automatically and then
uses the found area to analyze image noise.

Click (the Auto Profile button) in the toolbar, or use the Profile > Auto Profile with Regular
Image menu item, or press F2.
Neat Image will try to automatically find image areas suitable for analysis and will analyze them, first
the primary area (highlighted using the selection box in the viewer) and then the rest of the image. If the
primary area selected in viewer indeed contains no visible details then the resulting noise profile will be
accurate.
In difficult cases, Neat Image may be unable to find a sufficiently-large uniform featureless area in the
image. You will notice that the selected area, for example, contains some important details. In such a case,
use the semi-automatic profiling instead (see below).
If you see that the area automatically selected for analysis is indeed uniform and featureless, then the
resulting noise analysis is accurate. To be sure, check the Quality indicator in the Device Noise Profile box. A
profile built using a uniform and featureless area will usually show a high value there.
If the profile quality is high (for example, higher than 60%), then you can be sure that the noise profile is
accurate. In this case, proceed to Stage II. Documenting noise profile, page 32.
If the quality is not high, try to use the semi-automatic profiling instead (see below).
Besides the Quality indicator, Neat Image offers a few more tools to help you build accurate noise profiles.
When you build a noise profile, the viewer is set to the Assist mode by default. That mode allows to
highlight the weak details present in Luminance (Y), Cr, Cb channels, as shown in the image below:

The top image shows the original picture where details around the sun are barely visible, while the
channels in the bottom part display the image data in Assist mode allowing to see those weak details much
better.
That can help to verify that the selected area contains no useful details, which is very important for
accurate noise analysis. If you see that some details are present in the selected area then try to use the
semi-automatic profiling instead (see below).
Also, the Device Noise Profile box displays a histogram of the measured noise levels of the current profiles
frequency components. (In Beginner Mode, the histogram is shown in Profile Viewer only: menu Profile > Profile
Viewer).

Normally, the histogram bars are shaded in green, which means likely-accurate measurements. Yellow or
red shadings are used to indicate likely-inaccurate measurements of the corresponding components.

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It may happen that the lowest frequencies are measured inaccurately (especially
when the analysis area is small). The analysis area may seem featureless, but may
actually contain some gradient-like details. Their presence in the analysis area
may cause the noise levels to be measured inaccurately: the noise levels may be
estimated higher than they really are. An example of such a profile with inaccurate
measurements is shown in the top picture on the right.
A more accurate profiling (perhaps using a larger analysis area) could potentially
produce a better profile. Such a better profile would show a histogram like one
shown in the lower picture on the right.
If a noise profile with inaccurately measured lowest frequencies is used to process
an image, then those inaccurate measurements may lead to loss of details in the
corresponding frequency components. If you disable processing those frequency
components (by setting the Noise Reduction Amounts of those frequency components to 0% in the Filter >
Components settings), this profile can be still used to filter the other frequency components.

Case of semi-automatic profiling

1) Find a uniform featureless image area

Manually find and select an image area that contains no visible details.1
The area should be as large as possible (up to the maximum of 512x512 pixels). Using a large area is
preferred because that allows to more accurately measure the properties of the noise. Using smaller
areas is possible too, but the accuracy may be reduced. The absolute minimum size is 32x32 pixels.
You can resize the selection frame and check the size of the selection using the W and H indicators
in the bottom of the window. Also, Neat Image will indicate which frequency components can
be measured using the selected area. For example, Good (Low Freq) would mean that all frequency
compoments up to Low (specifically, High, Medium, and Low) can be measured using the selected area.
Scroll, pan, zoom the image to find a uniform image area and then select this area. Use the Assist mode
of the viewer to better see the weak details and choose an area without details.
If you cannot find a large enough uniform area in the input image, consider using an alternative regular
image or use the Calibration Target as described in the section (Stage I. Case of building a profile
using the Calibration Target, page 30).

2) Analyze selected image area

Click (the Auto Profile button).


Neat Image will automatically analyze the manually selected image area and then it will also automatically
analyze the rest of the image (it will automatically fine-tune the profile using the whole image).
The profile is now ready. Please proceed to Stage II. Documenting noise profile, page 32.

Case of manual profiling (Advanced Mode only 2 )

1) Find a uniform featureless area

Manually find and select an area that contains no visible details.


The area should be as large as possible (up to the maximum of 512x512 pixels). Using a large area is
preferred because that allows to more accurately measure the properties of the noise. Using smaller
areas is possible too, but the accuracy may be reduced. The absolute minimum size is 32x32 pixels.

2) Analyze selected area

Click (the Auto Profile button).


Neat Image will automatically analyze the manually selected area and build a noise profile.
1 You can find some examples of uniform featureless image areas in the Examples section, page 58.
2 You can switch using the Tools > Advanced Mode menu item.

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3) Additionally manually fine-tune the profile

Fine-tuning uses additional flat featureless image areas to make the noise profile more accurate.
You can manually select and analyze several such areas one after another.
1) Find and select a uniform featureless area
Scroll, pan, zoom the image in the viewer in the Device Noise Profile tab to find a new uniform area.
The size of an area may be from 16x16 to 256x256 pixels. Using larger areas makes fine-tuning more
accurate. The edges of the selection frame will change their thickness according to the selection size.
2) Analyze the selected area with Manual Fine-Tune

Click (the Manual Fine-Tune button) or use the Profile > Fine-Tune Using Selected Area menu item.
The analysis results will be shown in the noise profile
equalizer: the graphs of the equalizer will change some
of the values (see the picture on the right) each time you
add a new fine-tuning measurement. You can switch
from one channel to another in the equalizer to better
see a specific channels graph, or you can select to show
them all together.
The goal of manual fine-tuning is to fill the equalizer
with measured values (shown as graph-color knots) in
all points of the graphs. The previous steps (specifically,
the Auto Profile function) may have already filled some of
the values. Manual fine-tuning can further improve the
analysis by filling out the still missing or interpolated values (shown as yellow knots) and/or making
some of already measured values more precise.
3) Repeat 1-2 above with other uniform areas of different brightness
To make the device noise profile more accurate, fine-tune it using several uniform image areas. Select
areas of different brightness for best results. Try to choose and analyze uniform areas to cover all or
most elements of the equalizer in all its color channels. The more elements of profile are analyzed, the
higher is the overall quality of the profile.
4) Complete fine-tuning using Auto Complete

Click (the Auto Complete button) or use the Profile > Auto Complete menu item to automatically
complete the fine-tuning by adjusting the unmeasured values using interpolation based on the
measured data.
At this point the profile is ready. Proceed to Stage II. Documenting noise profile, page 32.

5.2.2. Stage I. Case of building a profile using the Calibration Target


The Calibration Target is specially designed to enable easy profiling of various imaging devices. It can be
used to build a single profile for a certain device mode or a set of profiles for different modes.
Follow the steps below to prepare a single profile using the Calibration Target.

Step 1. Preparing the Calibration Target

To use the Calibration Target, either use the menu Tools > Calibration Target and then click
(the Display target. . . button), or download the image of the Target from the Neat Image web page:
https://ni.neatvideo.com/download/calibration-target
There are two ways of using the Calibration Target: you can open it on the screen and take a shot (with a
digital or film camera, depending on your workflow) or you can print it out and shoot the hardcopy.
Shooting the Calibration Target off the screen is faster, especially with a digital camera. However, be
careful when shooting it off the screen of a CRT monitor because you may occasionally capture scan
bands. These bands may spoil a part of the shot. If you cannot avoid these bands, prepare a printed version
of the Calibration Target or shot it off an LCD monitor, which does not produce this effect. Also, try to
avoid glares when using a monitor with a glass or glossy screen.

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Case of shooting the Calibration Target off the screen

Open the Calibration Target image on the screen (menu Tools > Calibration Target and then click the Display
target. . . button). Then use the displayed Calibration Target in the Step 2 below.

Case of shooting the printed Calibration Target

Open the Calibration Target image in an image editor and print out the image on a sheet of white matte
paper; make the image fill the whole page. Then use the printed target in the Step 2 below.

Step 2. Preparing a shot or scan of the Calibration Target


Case of digital camera

Use the displayed or printed Calibration Target to prepare a test shot for building a device noise profile for
your camera:
1. Set the camera to a certain shooting mode (ISO level, etc.) you want to build a profile for;
2. Important: set the focusing system on infinity or in macro mode to get a slightly-out-of-focus
image of the target;
3. Make sure the Calibration Target fills the whole frame and make a shot;
4. Open the resulting shot in Neat Image (the Step 3 below).

Case of flatbed scanner

Use the printed Calibration Target to prepare a test scan for building a device noise profile for your flatbed
scanner:
1. Set the scanner to a certain scanning mode (resolution, light level, etc.) you want to build a profile
for;
2. If possible set the scanner slightly out of focus (an out of focus scan is preferred for profiling); a
possible way to achieve this is to raise the page over the scanner glass a bit;
3. Scan the printed Calibration Target;
4. Open the resulting scan in Neat Image (the Step 3 below).

Case of slide scanner

Use the displayed or printed Calibration Target to prepare a test scan for building a device noise profile for
your film scanner:
1. Set the camera to a certain shooting mode (film type, exposure, etc.) you want to build a profile for;
2. Important: set the focusing system on infinity or in macro mode to get a slightly-out-of-focus
image of the target;
3. Make sure the Calibration Target fills the whole frame and make a shot;
4. Develop the slide and put it into the scanner;
5. Set the scanner to a certain scanning mode (resolution, light level, etc.) that you want to build a
profile for and scan the slide;
6. Open the resulting scan in Neat Image (the Step 3 below).

Step 3. Analyzing image noise


Open the shot or scan of the Calibration Target in Neat Image and use it to build a noise profile:

Click (the Open input image button) in the toolbar or use the File > Open Input Image. . .
menu item. Select the shot or scan that you have just prepared.
Use the Profile > Auto Profile with Calibration Target menu item.
After the analysis is completed, proceed to the Stage II below.

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5.2.3. Stage II. Documenting noise profile


At this point of building the noise profile for your camera or
scanner, the noise analysis is done and all important noise
characteristics are gathered in the profile. You may still
want to manually document the profile if Neat Image has
not done this automatically. With most images from digital
cameras, Neat Image is able to automatically extract the
crucial information about the camera mode from the EXIF
data fields of the analyzed image and put this information to
the noise profile (you can see that in the Device Name and Mode
fields in the Device Noise Profile box.
If Neat Image has not automatically placed the required
information to the Device Name and Mode fields after noise
analysis, you can add those details manually.

Use the Device Name and Mode fields in the Device Noise Profile box. Here, you can specify the model of the
image acquisition device and describe the device mode, which can be something like the data in the
picture above.

About the Device name and Mode notes


It is highly recommended to specify these details to keep record of devices, device modes and
corresponding device noise profiles that you use.
The noise characteristics of any two devices can be extremely different. Even a single device in
different modes can produce significantly different noise. Therefore, it is always better to use
separate noise profiles for different devices and device modes to avoid inaccurate filtration and
artifacts. Commenting on the device name and device mode parameters helps you keep track of
them when you do manual profile matching, i.e., when you manually select a suitable profile to
process an image.
Automatic profile matching available in Neat Image uses the EXIF information from the image
files and profiles, not the Device Name and Mode fields, so filling out these fields may not be necessary
for automatic profile matching. However, filling out these fields is highly advisable both for the
clarity purposes and for the cases of EXIF-less input images where you have no other choice by to
manually select a suitable profile based on the Device Name and Mode fields.
See the Preparing profile set for different device modes section below to find out more about
camera and scanner parameters that may need to be documented in the Device Name and Mode fields.

5.2.4. Stage III. Saving the noise profile

Use (the Save Device Noise Profile As. . . button) in the Device Noise Profile box or use the Profile > Save
As. . . menu item.
In the Save Device Noise Profile As. . . dialog box, select the file name to save the profile to. The default
name is based on the device name and device mode when these are available from the EXIF data fields
of the analyzed image. If the EXIF data are not available then the default profile name is based on
the name of analyzed image file. Use the suggested default or change the name of the file to store the
device noise profile. Device noise profiles are saved in *.dnp files.

File naming considerations


If you are going to re-use a device noise profile later on, select a good file name explaining the
device name and mode so that you could easily recognize this profile by its file name. Alternatively,
you can use special folder structuring to keep many device noise profiles arranged according to
their device modes.
See Stage III. Structuring profile set, page 36, for additional information.

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A saved noise profile includes the complete noise analysis. Therefore, by re-opening the noise profile,
you can reproduce exactly the same conditions for image processing later on. Also, you can exchange
noise profiles with other Neat Image users.

5.3. Preparing profile set for different device modes


Usually, an imaging device can work in several different modes. Therefore, there should be several
device noise profiles corresponding to different modes to enable accurate processing of arbitrary images
produced by this device. If a set of profiles covers all modes of the device then any image from this device
can be processed by using one of the profiles from the set.
This subsection explains how to prepare a reusable set of profiles for a range of modes of an imaging
device.
As an owner of a certain imaging device, for example a digital camera, you are in perfect position to
prepare a profile set for that device because you have direct access to the device hardware. Moreover,
building and using your own set of profiles makes noise reduction more accurate because such profiles
better reflect the specifics of the device as well as the workflow you use.
When building a set of profiles, please follow the guidelines below that will help you structure the profile
set in such a way as to make consequent reuse of the set easy for you. And other people if you decide
to share your results. Please do share because in this way you will help people with the same camera or
scanner model. You can submit a set of profiles to the Neat Image team to publish the set in the profile
library by using a special form at https://ni.neatvideo.com/contacts/upload-noise-profiles or just share
them with other people directly.

5.3.1. Stage I. Selecting device parameters for profile set


To build a set of profiles for particular camera or scanner, you must identify different device parameters
that affect the noise characteristics and that you will take into account during profiling. There may be
many device parameters but not all of them influence image noise and those that do differ by the strength
of their influence. Naturally, you are only interested in those parameters that appreciably affect noise.
Different noise profiles should be prepared for different values of the most important parameters, so you
should identify those parameters in the first place.
The tables below describe the parameters that appreciably affect noise characteristics (from the most to the
less important ones) of digital cameras and scanners:

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Digital camera parameters in the order of decreasing importance


50, 100, 200, 400, etc.; depends on
ISO rate Higher ISO rate produces more noise.
a camera
Camera noise High, Normal, Low, etc.; depends In-camera noise reduction can reduce levels of noise
reduction on a camera in photos (usually at expense of some details).
Internal sharpness adjustment of a camera makes
Sharpness Low, Normal, High, etc.; depends
noise more intensive. Using no internal sharpness
adjustment on a camera
adjustment produces least noise.
1:1 (or Uncompressed), Strong JPEG compression typically produces
1:5 (or Fine), 1:10 (or Normal), more JPEG artifacts and destroys image elements
1:20 (or Basic), etc. including noise; weaker compression preserves more
Compression
or image elements including noise created by the image
2 bits/pixel, 4 bits/pixel, etc. sensor. It is preferable to use the lowest amount of
depends on a camera compression for the best results.
1:1 (original resolution, like
In-camera interpolation (both downsizing and
4288x2848), 1:2 (downsized in
Resolution upsizing, e.g., that of digital zoom) changes many
camera, e.g., 2144x1424), 2:1
characteristics of noise.
(digital zoom, 2x), etc.
Sun, Cloudy, Incandescent,
White balance adjustment changes characteristics of
White balance Fluorescent, etc.;
noise (mainly of color noise) slightly.
depends on a camera
Longer exposures produce more hot-pixel noise;
also, some cameras switch on the automatic noise
Exposure 1/16s, 1.0s, 16s;
reduction when exposure is longer than a certain
threshold this may affect the noise levels.

Scanner / camera parameters in the order of decreasing importance


For example, Kodak Tmax Every film type produces a specific grain pattern, which
Film type 400, Kodak Tri-X Professional depends on the film material. Strength of the grain
320, Fuji Superia 200, etc. depends on ASA/ISO rate of the film.
Scanning For example, 300 dpi, 3200 Higher scanning resolution emphasizes film grain and
resolution dpi, 4000 dpi, etc. makes it more evident in scanned images.
Single pass,
Number of Multi-pass scanning can potentially produce less grainy
2x pass,
scan passes images.
4x pass, etc.

If two images were captured in the same or similar conditions (most of the above device mode parameters
are the same) then the noise of these two images should be very similar. If you have built a device noise
profile using one of these images, you can use this profile to filter both images with good results. If
the shooting or scanning conditions were different then the noise in two images could be significantly
different. In this case, cross-use of one noise profile is not recommended. Instead, two different profiles
should be built and used to filter these two images.
Based on these considerations and tables above, identify the device mode parameters of your camera or
scanner that (1) are important from the noise standpoint and (2) are changed in your imaging tasks. For
example, if you never change the sharpness adjustment of your digital camera then there is no need to
build profiles for different values of the sharpness adjustment parameter. On the other hand, if you do
shoot with different ISO rates then you should build profiles for every ISO rate you use. Some parameters
are less important (for example, the White Balance or Exposure) and you may simply choose to ignore the
slight differences of the noise characteristics caused by changes of those device mode parameters.
Identify and make a list of the device mode parameters that are important for your imaging tasks. For
example, you could include two parameters of your digital camera: the ISO rate (ISO 100, 200, 400) and
JPEG compression level (HQ, SHQ). Then it is straightforward to write down all combinations of the
selected parameters:
JPEG HQ, ISO 100
JPEG HQ, ISO 200
JPEG HQ, ISO 400

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JPEG SHQ, ISO 100


JPEG SHQ, ISO 200
JPEG SHQ, ISO 400

Then prepare an individual profile for each combination from this list. Please proceed to the Stage II to
build profiles for all combinations.

5.3.2. Stage II. Building individual profiles


To build individual profiles for the profile set, you can either use the standard profiling procedure described
earlier, or employ a special built-in tool the Batch Profiler.

Using standard profiling procedure


To build individual profiles using the standard profiling procedure, follow the guidelines of the Building a
profile for a device mode (standard profiling procedure) section, page 26. Using those guidelines, build a
new profile for every combination of the device mode parameters included in your list (prepared in the
Stage I above). The resulting set of noise profiles (several *.dnp files on the disk) can then be structured as
recommended in the Stage III below.

Using Batch Profiler


The Batch Profiler is a dedicated tool that can automatically build several noise profiles using shots or scans
of the Calibration Target (please note that the Batch Profiler is not for regular images). To use this tool, you
must prepare several shots (scans) of the Calibration Target and then analyze them all at once using the
Batch Profiler.

1. Preparing set of images of the Calibration Target

To prepare shot or scan of the Calibration Target for every combination of device mode parameters, please
follow the two initial steps of Stage I. Case of building a profile using the Calibration Target:
Step 1. Preparing the Calibration Target, see page 30.
Step 2. Preparing a shot or scan of the Calibration Target, see page 31.
Do the Step 2 for every combination of device parameters in your list. Then place all resulting image
files (*.jpg, *.tiff, *.png) to a new folder (and its subfolders if necessary) on the hard drive, for example:
DocumentsTarget Images

2. Preparing profiles

To prepare profiles using the images of the Calibration Target:


1. Select the Tools > Batch Profiler. . . menu item to open the Batch Profiler window.
2. In the Batch Profiler window, specify the folder with images of the Calibration Target and the folder
where the Batch Profiler should save the prepared device noise profiles.
3. Click the Start button to initiate the profiling process.
When profiling is finished, new noise profiles are saved in the selected target folder.
4. Click the Close button to close the Batch Profiler window.
As the result, you have a set of noise profiles (several *.dnp files on the hard drive) that can be structured
as described below.

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5.3.3. Stage III. Structuring profile set


In the Stage II, you have prepared a set of profiles on the disk. You have assigned names to these profiles
that reflect the device modes they correspond to.
For example, profiles for Olympus Stylus SH-2 could be named like the following:

Olympus SH-2 - disk folder


SH-2 (ISO125; JPEG Normal; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp
SH-2 (ISO125; JPEG Normal; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp SH-2
SH-2 (ISO125; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp camera name
SH-2 (ISO125; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO200; JPEG Normal; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp ISO###
SH-2 (ISO200; JPEG Normal; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp ISO rate of
SH-2 (ISO200; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp camera mode
SH-2 (ISO200; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO400; JPEG Normal; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp JPEG Normal /
SH-2 (ISO400; JPEG Normal; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp JPEG Fine / TIFF
SH-2 (ISO400; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp file format and
SH-2 (ISO400; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp compression level
SH-2 (ISO800; JPEG Normal; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp
SH-2 (ISO800; JPEG Normal; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp Sharp#####
SH-2 (ISO800; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp sharpness adjustment
SH-2 (ISO800; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO1600; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp ####x####
SH-2 (ISO1600; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp image size
SH-2 (ISO3200; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp
SH-2 (ISO3200; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO6400; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 3200x2400).dnp
SH-2 (ISO6400; JPEG Fine; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO125; TIFF; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO200; TIFF; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO400; TIFF; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO800; TIFF; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO1600; TIFF; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO3200; TIFF; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp
SH-2 (ISO6400; TIFF; SharpNormal; 4608x3506).dnp

When the profiles are named like this, manual selection of a suitable profile is simple. You can check the
device mode of the input image (using Image Metadata information in the Input Image tab or using button
in the bottom of the image viewer) and then select and load a profile that matches that device mode.

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There is another way to select profile for an image, based on structuring the profile set using the disk
folders. For example, the above Olympus Stylus SH-2 profile set could be structured like this:

Olympus Stylus SH-2 - disk folder


TIFF (uncompressed)
4608x3506 Olympus Stylus SH-2
JPEG/TIFF,
ISO 125.dnp
####x####
ISO 200.dnp - the names of disk subfolders
ISO 400.dnp containing device noise profiles
ISO 800.dnp for corresponding device modes;
ISO 1600.dnp
ISO ###.dnp
ISO 3200.dnp
- device noise profiles;
ISO 6400.dnp
JPEG Note that the constant parameter (Sharpness
Fine (high quality) adjustment) is not reflected in the folder
3200x2400 structure. However, if there were profiles
with different values of that parameter then
ISO 125.dnp
an additional subfolder should be added.
ISO 200.dnp
ISO 400.dnp Parameters that can be disregarded, such as
ISO 800.dnp exposure time, are not reflected in the folder
ISO 1600.dnp structure too.
ISO 3200.dnp
ISO 6400.dnp
4608x3506
ISO 125.dnp
ISO 200.dnp
ISO 400.dnp
ISO 800.dnp
ISO 1600.dnp
ISO 3200.dnp
ISO 6400.dnp
Normal (normal quality)
3200x2400
ISO 125.dnp
ISO 200.dnp
ISO 400.dnp
ISO 800.dnp
4608x3506
ISO 125.dnp
ISO 200.dnp
ISO 400.dnp
ISO 800.dnp

In this case, the folder tree stores device noise profiles in a structured way, which helps to select one
profile from the set given the device mode of the input image.
Note that the automatic profile matching provided by Neat Image does work well in both cases: you
can keep the whole set of profiles as a flat list of files in one folder, or you can structure the files into
subfolders. This choice only affects the convenience of manual selection of profiles, while automatic
profile matching can handle both cases equally well.
If the automatic profile matching is not available (for example, if the images or profiles contain no EXIF
information or the available EXIF details are incomplete) then you have to select profiles manually.
Therefore, we recommend to structure profiles according to one of the methods above to make your
manual work easier.

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5.3.4. Stage IV. Documenting profile set


Along with the text comments inside individual noise profiles and their file names, we advise to document
the whole profile set with a plain text file explaining the following points:
Author of the profile set and profiling date
Device name, firmware version
Device modes that have been profiled in this set
Device mode parameters that change within the profile set
Device mode parameters that are constant for all profiles in the set
Post-processing applied (after receiving an image from the imaging device and before opening it in
Neat Image)
An example of such a description is below:

Olympus Stylus SH-2 noise profiles


by John Smith, June 19, 2015

A set of profiles for Olympus Stylus SH-2 TIFF and JPEG files. The profiles were built using shots of the
Calibration Target for the following file formats and image sizes:
TIFF: 4608x3506
JPEG Fine / Normal: 3200x2400 / 4608x3506

For each file format and image size above, shots with different ISO rates (125, 200, 400, 800, 1600 3200, and
6400) were made and used to build profiles.
For Normal quality JPEG images ISO rates from 1600 to 6400 were not taken.
Default camera settings were used for Sharpness, Contrast, and Saturation. In-camera noise reduction was
switched off. The white balance was set to daylight.
No post processing was applied; the calibration target shots directly from the camera were opened in Neat Image
to build profiles.

Such kind of summary will later help you understand any set of profiles prepared by yourself and will let
other people understand your results if you decide to share your profiles.

5.4. Using noise profiles


When you have a set of profiles for your camera or scanner, you can directly use these profiles to process
images in Neat Image. Usually there is only one profile that is most suitable to process a given input
image. Therefore it is very important to select the right profile, which would provide the best match
between profile and image. Profiles in a set usually correspond to different modes of the imaging device.
To make a perfect match between a profile and image, the device mode of a profile should be the same or
very close to the device mode used to capture the image.
There are two ways to select a device noise profile that matches the input image:
To automatically select the most suitable profile from a pre-built set of profiles using Auto Match (see
page 13 to learn how to use Auto Match);
To manually select the most suitable profile from a pre-built profile set based on device mode
comments (see page 13 for details).
When you select and load a profile in either way, Neat Image shows the degree of match between the
profile and input image. This degree is shown by the Match indicator in the Device Noise Profile box. The
match degree is calculated on the basis of the image and profiles metadata (such as the EXIF data fields in
images produced by digital cameras). If the profiles device mode is exactly the same as the device mode
used to capture the image then the match is 100%. There is always a 100% match between an image and
profile built using this very image (Neat Image displays that using the note (AP) in the Match indicator).
If the device modes of a profile and image are very close then the match degree is close to 100%. The
more different the device modes of profile and image are, the lower the match degree is. Use the match

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degree as an indication of match accuracy. If the match degree is low then it is likely that building a new
profile (using the current input image or a shot of the Calibration Target taken in current device mode)
would produce better noise reduction results.
Obviously it is preferable to build a new noise profile for each new input image (unless the image does
not allow building a quality profile because it contains no large uniform areas for analysis), because such
a profile would perfectly match the noise of that image. Nevertheless, any noise profile can, with some
degree of accuracy, be used to process other images captured by the same device working in the same or
similar mode. This is less accurate than building a profile for each image but saves time because building
a new quality profile can take more time than re-using a pre-built one. This is especially important if one
profile is re-used many times, for example to process a series of images produced in one device mode.
Also, it may not always be possible to build an accurate profile using input image when it contains no flat
featureless areas.
When using pre-built profiles, you may also want to pay attention to the Quality indicator in the Device Noise
Profile box. A properly-built and fine-tuned profile will show a high value in that indicator. If the profile
quality is high (for example, higher than 70%) then you can be sure that the profile is accurate.
Both Quality and Match indicators should usually show high values for the noise reduction of the current
input image using the current noise profile to be accurate.

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6. Additional tools
6.1. Variants of filtration
When adjusting the Neat Image filter settings, you may want to compare different adjustments and
select one that delivers the best visual results. You can of course manually make the adjustments and
check preview after each adjustment, but it would be easier if you could prepare several variants of such
adjustments and then quickly switch between their corresponding previews. Then it would be much
simpler to visually evaluate and compare the results.
That is exactly what variants of filtration do in Neat Image. You can create up to four variants, each with
its own set of filters settings, and quickly switch between them to evaluate their previews.
Here is how you can use variants of filtration (make sure the Noise Filter Settings tab is open):

1 To create a new variant press and hold the button in the toolbar and select one of the available
choices:
a Duplicate
a new variant will be a copy of the current variant (the current filter settings);
you can then modify this new variant by adjusting the filter settings however you like, potentially
making the new variant very different than the original one;
b Default Preset
a new variant will be based on the filter settings obtained via the Default Filter Preset setting in Neat Image
Preferences;

c Select Preset >


a new variant will be based on the filter preset you select from the presets available on the disk (you
select one of them using the context menu);
d Load Preset. . .
a new variant will be based on the filter preset you select from the presets available on the disk (you
select one of them using the regular preset loading dialog).
The new variant is added to the toolbar as a new button with the corresponding name, for example
.
The new variant automatically becomes current: it receives a special shading on its button.
When you make any adjustments to the filter settings, they are applied and kept within the current
variant. So if you want to change filter settings in any other variant, then you need to select that variant
first and only then make any adjustments of the filters.

2 To select one of the existing variants (to make it current) click the corresponding variants button in
the toolbar (or press the corresponding number button on the keyboard: 1, 2, . . . ). This will change the
filter settings and preview to the selected variant.
If you now change any filter settings, then the changes will be applied to the current variant.

3 To compare two variants (their previews) you can simply click their buttons to select them alternatively.
There is also an easier and quicker way. If you right-click another (not the current) variants button
instead of doing a regular left-click, then the clicked variant is only temporarily selected and the
selection returns to the previous variant once you release the right mouse button. This can be used
to quickly switch between any two variants (the current one and an alternative one) for comparison
purposes: the preview will change from one variant to another and you can easily compare them to
decide which one is better.

4 To delete an unneeded variant use its corresponding remove button ( ).

5 When you are happy with one specific variant simply keep it current and it will then be used by
Neat Image for actual processing.

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6.2. Alternative modes of image viewer


The image viewer in Neat Image can show the working image in several alternative modes to enable
detailed examination of both channel and frequency components. Examining the components helps to
find flat featureless image areas for noise analysis. Also, that allows to visually compare the original and
filtered version of each component and to find optimum filter settings for the corresponding component
easier and faster.
Use (Viewer mode button) in the viewer toolbar to select the
desired viewer mode.
The viewer mode will change accordingly and will display the image
components separately or as one composite image.
Examine individual channel and frequency components of the image,
check the presence of noise in individual components. Working in the
Noise Filter Settings tab, you can use the separately displayed components
to identify those components that do not receive enough (or receive too
much) noise reduction and adjust the corresponding filter settings.

You can also adjust the brightness of the viewer to easier see image details and noise in very dark or very
bright areas of the image:

Use (the viewer brightness controls) in the viewer toolbar to adjust and/or reset the
viewer brightness to better see the noise and details in very dark or very bright areas of the image.
Please note that this adjustment does not change the underlying image data in any way. The adjustment
only affects the image viewer, i.e., the way the image is displayed in it.

6.3. Navigator
The image viewer has an additional Navigator panel, which offers an easy way to locate and navigate to an
area of interest in a large image that does not entirely fit into the viewer, for example when you zoom into
the image to see its fine details. When using Navigator you do not need to zoom out and then again zoom in
(though such an approach to locating an area of interest can be used as well).
Use (the Navigator button in top-left corner of the viewer), the Tools > Navigator menu item
or press F8 to open or close the Navigator panel.
Use the mouse pointer to drag the visible area frame (the red rectangle) to the desired part of the image
within the Navigator panel. This will make the main viewer navigate to the same position in the image.

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6.4. Profile Viewer


The Profile Viewer provides detailed information about the current noise profile.

Use (the Profile viewer button) in the Device Noise Profile box in the Device Noise Profile tab to open the
Profile Viewer window.

The Profile Viewer provides the following details:


this box contains the metadata (such as the EXIF information) associated with the
Image Metadata
image used to build this profile. This information is used by Auto Match to find a profile that matches
an input image.
Main Noise Sample this is a noise sample (a crop from the image used to build this profile). The
noise sample allows to visually evaluate the noise described by this profile. Also, you can easily
see whether any details are present in this area, which would make the profile less accurate
(only flat featureless areas without any details should be used for profiling, so the sample should
normally contain no visible details).
this indicator tells whether there is any clipping in the analyzed image area. Clipping
Clipping
occurs when the sample contains pixels that are very close to or in fact are entirely white, entirely
black or have exactly the same color/tone. Clipping reduces the overall profile quality.
these values show how uniform the noise sample is in all color channels. The uniformity
Uniformity
is low when any details are present in the area. Low uniformity reduces the overall profile quality.
this is an estimation of the overall quality of the noise analysis contained in
Overall Profile Quality
this profile. The higher this value the better this profile seems to be. A quality profile is necessary
for quality noise reduction.
these figures show the actual noise levels measured during profiling. There are the
Noise Levels
noise level of the main sample, average noise level of the whole profile and noise levels of the
channel and frequency components. These figures are a good indication of how noisy the image
acquisition device is.
Fine-Tuning Completeness this indicator tells how well this profile is fine-tuned. Fine-tuning is a
part of profiling process (both automatic and manual) and the more complete and accurate the
fine-tuning the higher the overall profiling quality. If you work with Neat Image in Advanced mode
then you can see that the more equalizer values are filled in with measured data the higher the
overall profile quality is. You can improve the profile quality by additional fine-tuning.

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7. Batch processing
Neat Image standalone (Win) can automatically process multiple images. To do that, you can create
several image filtration tasks (one task corresponds to one input image to be processed) and let Neat Image
process the tasks one after another.
You can create several tasks one by one and you create many tasks at once.
You can use the same filtration parameters for all tasks or customize groups of tasks or individual tasks
with different filtration settings. You can modify parameters of any task at any time.
In this section, we explain in details how you can use all these capabilities of Neat Image.

7.1. All Tasks tab


When you normally start Neat Image, it usually opens with the Editor tab open. To process many images

switch to the All tasks tab: (if there is no All tasks tab, press the Esc button).
Then you can process many images using the tools available there. This is how it looks like:

The All tasks tab contains the list of image filtration tasks (in the central part of the window), a set of tools
to create, edit, configure, remove, start and stop tasks, and the panel on the right with detailed information
about the currently selected task(s).

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7.2. Creating new image filtration tasks


Each filtration task in Neat Image includes one input image and one customized set of filtration settings.
To process many images you must create many image filtration tasks using the available methods:

To create one image filtration task

Click (the Add new task(s) button) in the toolbar and then select Add Image(s). . . in the popup menu;
or use the Task > Add Image(s). . . item in the main menu.
Neat Image will then open the Select input image(s) dialog to let you select the input image to be processed.
Select an image on the disk and click the Open button.
A new filtration task with the selected image will be created and added to the list of tasks. The left
panel of the Neat Image window will also show the thumbnail of the added input image.
At this point you can proceed to work with this new task in a single-task manner (using the workflow
described in the Filtration process details section, page 11; to do that just click in the toolbar or
click the Edit this task icon inside the thumbnail of the task in the left panel).
Instead of going to Editor to work with new task, you may also want to create more filtration tasks using
the same procedure described above and later configure the created tasks all at once and let Neat Image
process them all together. Or you can also create several more new filtration tasks in a more automated
ways as described below.

To create several image filtration tasks


Method 1: select several images

Click (the Add new task(s) button) in the toolbar and then select Add Image(s). . . in the popup menu;
or use the Task > Add Image(s). . . item in the main menu.
In the Select input image(s) dialog, select several images instead of one (you can hold the Shift or Ctrl key
pressed to select multiple images) and then click the Open button.
A new filtration task will be created for every selected image. All newly created tasks will be added to
the list in the All tasks tab. The left panel of the Neat Image window will also show thumbnails of the
added input images. The settings of new tasks will be based on the Defaults specified in the Preferences.

Method 2: select a folder with images

Click (the Add new task(s) button) in the toolbar and then select Add Folder. . . in the popup menu; or
use the Task > Add Folder. . . item in the main menu.
In the Browse For Folder dialog, specify the folder with images that you want to process and then click
the OK button.
A new filtration task will be created for every image found in the specified folder and all its sub-folders.
The new tasks will be added to the list in the All tasks tab. The left panel will also show thumbnails
of the added input images. The settings of new tasks will be based on the Defaults specified in the
Preferences.

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Method 3: select any combination of images and folders and customize task settings

Click (the Add new task(s) button) in the toolbar and then select Batch. . . in the popup menu; or use
the Task > Batch. . . item in the main menu.
Neat Image will then open the Batch dialog to let you specify the input images, device noise profiles to
be used, filter settings, output settings, etc.

Locate the images to be processed using the browser in the Input Images box (left side of the dialog).
Check boxes against individual image files to be processed and/or against folders with images (then all
images in checked folders and sub-folders will be selected for processing as well).
To check the boxes use the mouse or press the Space button on the keyboard.
When selecting individual images you can see their thumbnails and metadata in the Image metadata box
in the central part of the dialog window. Use that preview to select right images for processing.
In the Device Noise Profiles box, specify how noise profiles should be prepared for the images selected in
the Input Images box:
Do not prepare noise profile - to not automatically prepare any profile(s); do that later manually
Auto Profile - to automatically build a profile for each image
Auto Match - to find the best matching profile for every image
Smart Profile - to try both Auto Profile and Auto Match and select the best profile
Use specified profile - to use a specified profile for all images

When Use specified profile is selected, click (blue folder) or the popup menu (click ) to specify
the noise profile to be used.
When available, check the Auto fine-tune option to automatically fine-tune selected profile(s) during
processing. When Auto profile image is selected auto fine-tuning is applied automatically.
In the Filter Settings box, select the filter preset to process the images selected in the Input Images box:
Use default filter preset - to use the default preset specified in Preferences > Defaults;
Use specified custom preset - to use a custom preset loaded from the disk.

When Use specified custom preset is selected, click (pink folder) or the popup menu (click ) to
select a filter preset to be used to process the selected images.

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In the Output Images box, specify the Bitdepth using the drop-down list. Select 8 bits per channel, 16 bits per
channel, 32 bits per channel or Match input. In the latter case, the output images will have the same bitdepth
as the corresponding input images.
Select the way the output image should be saved when filtration is finished:
Do not auto save output images - to not automatically save output images (save manually)
Save to folder(s) of input images - to automatically save the output images next to the input images
Save to specified folder - to automatically save the output images into one specified folder

With Save to specified folder, you can select the target folder using (the Browse button).
Select the output File format: JPEG, TIFF, PNG or BMP.
When JPEG is selected, you can also adjust the JPEG Quality level (50-100; 100 is the highest for
the best quality, 50 is the lowest for the smallest file size). With PNG, you can select the Compression
level (0 is for the lowest compression and 9 is for the highest compression / smallest file size).
Below the Output Images box, check Auto remove completed tasks if you want to automatically remove
completed tasks from the list of the filtration tasks. This is only possible if Neat Image is instructed to
automatically save the output images (otherwise the output images would be lost). Once the output
images are saved, the tasks can be removed from the list.

Click to add new image filtration tasks to the task list in the All tasks tab.
Several new image filtration tasks will be created in the list.
Neat Image may then automatically start processing these new tasks, provided:
(1) the new tasks are ready for processing (contain valid input images and noise profiles) and
(2) processing is not generally suspended.
Please see the Processing image filtration tasks section, page 47, for further workflow details.

Method 4: use drag and drop

Drag one or several image files from another application (for example, from Windows Explorer) and
drop them in Neat Image window. Neat Image will automatically create new filtration tasks for each
dropped file. The settings of new tasks will be based on the Defaults specified in the Preferences.

Method 5: use Send To command in Windows Explorer

Select one or several image files in Windows Explorer, right click on them and use Send To >Neat Image.
Neat Image will automatically create a new image filtration task for each selected image file. The
settings of new tasks will be based on the Defaults specified in the Preferences.

7.3. Configuring image filtration tasks


You can change the parameters (such as noise profile, filter preset, etc.) of any filtration task available
in the list of tasks. Usually, you will change some parameters during or after adding new tasks. For
example, after adding some new tasks you may want to instruct Neat Image to use Auto Profile to prepare
noise profiles for all these tasks. Or you may specify a fixed noise profile available on the disk. Or assign
a specific custom filter preset to process all selected tasks. All that can be done directly in the All tasks tab
using the controls available around the task list. Below you will find a description of all these controls. To
use any of them to adjust parameters of one or several tasks, select some tasks in the list of tasks and then
use the tools as described below.

To assign a noise profile to selected task(s)


Select one or several tasks in the list of tasks and:
Click (the Auto Profile button) in the toolbar or use the Task > Auto Profile menu item to instruct
Neat Image to use Auto Profile to automatically build a new noise profile for every selected task.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

Click (blue folder) in the toolbar or use the Device noise profile popup menu in the Filtration Task box
(or use the Task > Set Profile. . . menu item) to specify a noise profile to be used in all selected tasks.

Click (the Profile Matcher button) in the toolbar or use the Task > Match Profile menu item to automatically
find and assign matching profiles to selected tasks.

Click (the Auto Fine-Tune button) in the toolbar or use the Task > Auto Fine-Tune menu item to make
Neat Image automatically fine-tune the assigned noise profile to the input image for every selected
task.

To assign a filter preset to selected task(s)


Select one or several tasks in the list of tasks and:
Click (pink folder) in the toolbar or use the Filter preset popup menu in the Filtration Task box (or use
the Task > Set Preset. . . menu item) to assign a filter preset to all selected tasks.

To edit a selected task in Editor


Please note that you can apply only most general changes to the tasks using the tools available in the All
tasks tab. For example, you can assign a specific noise profile to a group of tasks. However, to do any more
subtle modifications like manual profiling with some manual tuning of filter settings requires using the
Editor. To do that simply select any task and open it in the Editor tab for detailed examination:

Select a task in the list and click (the Edit selected filtration task button) or use the Task > Edit. . .
menu item.
Neat Image will open the selected task in the Editor tab to let modify all details of the test: input image,
device noise profile and filter settings. You can then use the tools and workflow described earlier (the
Filtration process details section, page 11).
At any moment, you can switch back to the All tasks tab, select another task, apply any changes, etc.
It is also possible to switch to another task directly within the Editor tab using the thumbnail panel in
the left part of the window: double-click the thumbnail of the desired task to switch Editor to that task
or use the buttons and in the top to switch to the previous and next task in the list.
It is also possible to switch to the previous and next task using the keyboard shortcuts (see the Edit
menu for details).

7.4. Processing image filtration tasks


As soon as you have created one or more filtration tasks, Neat Image will try to automatically process
them, unless processing is manually suspended. You can control that using the buttons in the left bottom
corner of the Neat Image window, right above the All tasks tab:

Click the (the Suspend All button) to suspend processing all tasks in the list.

Click the (the Resume All button) to resume processing all tasks in the list.
Not every task can be automatically processed though. To be processed automatically, a task must be
configured, which means it should have an input image and noise profile specified. While an input image
is almost always available, a noise profile may be in some cases not available. A newly created task may
get a noise profile from the Defaults section of Neat Image Preferences (menu Tools > Preferences > Defaults), or
you may specify it manually when creating or configuring the task.
If some of the tasks do not yet have any assigned noise profile (they show the status profile not ready in the
Profile column in the list of tasks) you can assign a profile using one of the options described the previous
section (Configuring image filtration tasks, page 46).
As soon as a task is provided with a profile, it can be automatically processed and Neat Image will
immediately try to do that. You will then see running progress indicators, changing statuses of profile, its
quality, match level, output image, etc.
You can stop processing at any moment using the above Suspend All button and resume it later.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

7.5. Reviewing processing results


When image processing is completed and several tasks already contain some results (such as newly built
noise profiles and output images produced by the filter), you may want to quickly review the results to
verify the visual quality of the output images and if necessary to check the areas used by Auto Profile. To do
that open the Editor tab, switch to the Output Image tab in there, and then visually inspect the output image in
that task. Then you can switch to the previous or next task using the buttons and in the top of
the thumbnail panel or using the keyboard shortcuts (see the Edit menu for details). In this way, you can
inspect the processing results for all tasks and if necessary adjust those tasks where results are not fully
satisfactory. For example, you can adjust the filter settings or re-build the noise profiles in those tasks.
Because building noise profiles using noise-only areas is very important for accurate noise reduction, it
may also be useful to directly review the image areas found and used by Auto Profile: switch to the Device
Noise Profile tab and then check the selected area (it should contain visible noise and no useful details).

Then do the same for all other tasks by switching from one task to another using the buttons and
or keyboard shortcuts. If you see that the area selected by Auto Profile contains any details or is otherwise
not good for profiling (for example, if it shows some clipping or contains no visible noise at all), select
another area manually, re-build the profile and then re-process the image to get better results.

7.6. Saving output images


When an image filtration task is completed, Neat Image will try to automatically save the output image (if
you instructed it to do so or if the Output settings in Preferences instruct it to save output images automatically).
You can also save the output image manually, either from the Editor tab or directly from the All tasks tab. In
the All tasks tab, you can save several output images at once.

To automatically or manually save output image(s) of filtration task(s)

Select one or several tasks (they do not need to be fully processed yet) and click (the Save output
image as button) in the toolbar or use the Task > Save Output. . . menu item.

Neat Image will open a dialog to let you specify how you want to save the output images of all
selected tasks (when these output images will be ready, if they are not prepared yet).
Neat Image may ask about particular image saving properties, e.g., the JPEG quality level, about the
folder where you want to save the output images.
In some cases, you can additionally select the option called Auto remove completed tasks. When that
option is enabled, Neat Image will remove (in other words close) the tasks from the list of tasks after
saving the output images to the disk. If it is not selected, you can later remove the completed tasks
manually.
You can instruct Neat Image to always automatically save output images (use the menu Tools > Preferences >
Output > Auto save output images). In this case, you will not have to manually save output images; Neat Image
will do that for you automatically whenever possible.

7.7. Removing image filtration tasks


To remove image filtration task(s) from the list
When you finished working with an image filtration task and saved the filtered output image to the disk,
you may not need this task anymore and may want to remove it from the list of tasks.

Select one or more filtration tasks in the list that you want to remove and click (the Remove
selected filtration task button) or use the Task > Remove menu item or just press the Delete button on the
keyboard.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

8. Preferences
There are several preferences that adjust the behavior of Neat Image standalone (Win).
Use the Tools > Preferences. . . menu item to open the Preferences dialog box.

8.1. General preferences


Auto zoom to fit on image open
Check this option to make the image viewer automatically adjust zoom level to fit the image into the
window.

Show hints over interface controls


This option switches on/off the hints. The hints are displayed when the mouse pointer is placed over any
control in the Neat Image interface.

Show splash screen at startup


This controls whether the splash screen (the Neat Image logo) is displayed at the application startup.

Updates
Periodically check for software updates

Neat Image can automatically access the Internet to check whether an updated version of the software is
available on the webpage of Neat Image.
Unless this option is disabled, Neat Image will automatically look for updates every few days.
You can also manually run such a check using the Check Now button available there.
Neat Image will display the currently installed version of the software as well as the latest available
version of the product that can be downloaded. When a newer version is available you can use the
provided download link to visit the download area to download and install the updated version.

8.2. Defaults
Default Device Noise Profile
There are several possible ways to assign a noise profile to a newly created image filtration task:
Do not prepare noise profile automatically
If this variant is selected then no device noise profile is loaded when a new task is created.
You will have to manually assign or build a noise profile for the input image.
Auto Profile
If this variant is selected then a new profile is automatically built by analyzing the input image.
This provides the most accurate noise analysis but takes a bit more time and may not always work
(if the input image does not contain enough flat featureless areas for analysis).
Auto Match
If this variant is selected then the Auto Match function tries to select the most matching profile
(matching the input image) from a pre-built set of profiles.
This provides shorter overall processing times when pre-built noise profiles are available and
can be matched against the input image (matching requires both profiles and images to contain
EXIF metadata).

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Smart Profile (Auto Profile and Auto Match)


If this variant is selected then Neat Image uses both Auto Profile and Auto Match to prepare two noise
profiles and then selects the better one of those two profiles. This provides higher overall quality at
expense of slightly longer processing time. To be fully efficient, this option also needs a pre-built
set of noise profiles (for Auto Match to work). You can configure the behavior of the Smart Profile
function in the Smart Profile section of the Profiling tab.
Use specified default profile
If this variant is selected and a valid profile is specified then it is automatically loaded when a new
image filtration task is created.
Useful when all input images (in a series you need to process) have been produced by the same
device working in the same or very similar device modes.
Auto fine-tune
If this option is checked then Neat Image additionally fine-tunes the assigned noise profile by
analyzing the input image.
This provides higher accuracy of resulting noise reduction when the input image contains flat
featureless areas suitable for fine-tuning analysis.

Default Filter Preset


There are two ways to assign a filter preset to a newly created image filtration task:
Use programs default settings
If this variant is selected then no custom preset is loaded from the hard drive when a new filtration
task is created. Instead, Neat Image uses its pre-programmed default filter settings. You still can
adjust the filter settings manually or assign a different filter preset for the filtration task after the
task is created with these default settings.
Use specified custom preset
If this variant is selected and a valid filter preset is specified then it is automatically loaded when a
new task is created.
This setting is useful when you want to apply filtration using the same custom default filter settings
to all input images. You still can adjust the filter settings manually or assign a different filter preset
for the filtration task after the task is created with the defaults from this custom preset.

8.3. Profiling preferences


Save noise samples in profiles
Enable this option to make Neat Image save a noise sample from the analyzed image area into device
noise profile (*.dnp file). This will increase the size of the *.dnp file, but will also improve the compatibility
with the future versions of the software (Neat Image will be able to re-build the profile using the saved
noise sample).

Show warnings about selected image area


Enable this option to let Neat Image display possible warnings about the selected image area during
profiling. For example, Neat Image may warn you about clipping or non-uniformity detected in the
selected area, thus helping you select a better area for profiling.

Smart Profile
is one of the possible ways to prepare a noise profile for an image filtration task. Smart Profile
Smart Profile
uses both Auto Profile and Auto Match (with Auto Fine-Tune) to prepare two candidate profiles and then selects
the better one of two profiles.
Use the settings in the Smart Profile box to configure the behavior of the Smart Profile function.

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Automatically select the best profile

Use this option to let Neat Image automatically decide which noise profile to use.

Prefer profile prepared by Auto Profile

Let Neat Image preferably select the profile prepared by Auto Profile when it can find a good area for
analysis in the input image. When the area is not very good then Neat Image will use the profile prepared
by Auto Match with Auto Fine-Tune.

Prefer profile prepared by Auto Match and Auto Fine-Tune

Let Neat Image preferably select the profile prepared by Auto Match when it can find a matching profile
among the pre-built noise profiles, even when Auto Profile provides a good profile as well.

8.4. Matching preferences


8.4.1. Profile Matching
Use profile matching preferences to adjust the way Neat Image matches noise profiles to input images.

Look for noise profiles in the following folder


If you select this option then Neat Image will look for matching noise profiles in the specified folder.
If you have several sub-folders with profiles, select the topmost folder of all those subfolders to let
Neat Image search in all of them.
By default, the folder used to store profiles (see the Folders > Profile folder setting in the same Preferences
window) is used for matching. You can use any other (sub-)folder for profile matching as well.

Look for noise profiles in folders of input images


If this option is selected then Neat Image will look for matching profiles in the folders of the input images.
If you put desired noise profile to a folder with input images and select this option then Neat Image will
select this profile for every image from that folder. If there are several profiles in such a folder then the
best matching will be selected for every input image.

Matching parameter priorities


To automatically match profiles for the input image, Neat Image compares the device parameters of the
input image and candidate profiles selected from the folder specified by the above options. Different
parameters usually have to be matched with different priorities. Using Matching parameters priorities controls,
you can select the priorities of such parameters as Input device, ISO rate, Compression, Resolution, Sharpness,
Exposure:

Match - the parameter should match exactly;


High - it is highly important that the parameter is very close or matches exactly;
Low - it is preferable that the parameter is close or matches exactly;
Ignore - the parameter is not important at all.

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8.5. Filtration preferences


Main window
is to restore the application window (if it was minimized during processing) when all
Auto restore on finish
filtration tasks are done.

Processing priority
Use this option to adjust the priority to the Neat Image filtration process running in a multitasking
environment:
Idle - lowest priority; filtration gives way to other applications when necessary;
Below - priority below normal; provides the smoothest performance for all applications;
this may slow down Neat Image a bit, but will allow you to work
normally with other applications, especially if the computer is not fast;
Normal - normal priority; filtration may somewhat slow down other applications.

Preview
Limit preview size

This option allows to limit the maximum size of the automatic preview area (the preview area selected
by Neat Image itself when you do not select any area manually). Limiting the preview size can be useful
because updating a smaller area is faster than updating preview for the whole image. Also, preparing a
larger preview requires more memory resources, which may be a significant factor on machines with small
amounts of memory resources.
By default, this option is enabled, so if you work with a large image, then the preview is limited to a part
of the image. That limitation only affects the preview, while the final image is processed fully. You can
always adjust the limit upwards or downwards, depending on your needs.
If you disable this option completely, then there will be no limit at all and the whole image will be
processed for preview.

8.6. Performance preferences


The first group of settings in this tab selects the computing devices to be used for image processing. This
group of settings is optional, it is shown only if at least one supported GPU (graphics processing unit)
is available along with the regular CPU (central processing unit, or processor). This group includes the
following items:

Use CPU only


This option makes Neat Image perform all image processing using only CPU.

Use GPU only


This option makes Neat Image perform all image processing using only GPU when possible.

Use CPU and GPU


If you select this option then Neat Image will process images using both CPU and GPU.
Depending on individual performance of each computing device (CPU and GPU), each of the above
options may be the most efficient. You can try different settings and measure the resulting speed using the
Benchmark tool below.

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CPU
Number of used cores

This option adjusts the number of CPU cores used by Neat Image for processing. The number of used
cores can go up to the total number of cores in all CPUs in your computer (like 4 cores in Core i3 with
enabled hyperthreading, 8 cores in a desktop version of Core i7, etc.). If the computer includes two
physical CPUs then the number of cores is correspondingly higher. Ideally, using all cores should provide
the best overall performance. In some cases however, the best processing speed may be achieved if fewer
cores are used (especially on CPUs with hyperthreading). For example, using fewer than all 8 virtual cores
in a Core i7 is in some cases faster, so you may want to test different values of this setting.

GPU
In this box, you can specify which of the available computation-capable GPU devices (CUDA-capable
NVIDIA cards and/or supported OpenCL-capable AMD/ATI cards) should be used for image processing
(in addition to CPU or instead of CPU). When you have one or more GPUs, you can allow Neat Image to
use it and specify how much GPU memory may be used for Neat Images image processing. When you
also run other software that uses the GPU, you may want to allow Neat Image to use only a part of the
available GPU memory and leave some part of it free for the other software. When you are not sure, try
different values and see which setting gives the best overall results in terms of performance.

Check Speed
Use the Check Speed button to measure the image processing speed with the current settings specified in the
CPU and GPU boxes.

Optimize Settings
Use the Optimize Settings. . . button to open a specialized dialog designed to measure image processing
speeds achieved with different combinations of the CPU and GPU settings. It allows to automatically
benchmark all possible combinations of settings and to identify the best combination. This is the easiest
way to optimize the performance of Neat Image for specific CPU and GPU hardware.

GPU Troubleshooting
Use the GPU Troubleshooting. . . button to open a specialized dialog designed to check the GPU detection
details and if necessary disable all use of the NVIDIA CUDA and/or AMD/ATI OpenCL GPU by
Neat Image. Disabling all use of GPU by Neat Image may be useful if the GPU driver is faulty or unstable
or if using the GPU by Neat Image causes any other problems.

8.7. Folder preferences


Profile Folder
Select the folder where Neat Image must look for device noise profiles. This should be the topmost
folder of all the (sub)folders with device noise profiles. Neat Image will display all profiles (stored in
all subfolders of the specified folder) in the popup menu in the Device noise profile panel of the application
window and in other parts of Neat Image.
By default, the Profile folder is located in your Documents folder:
DocumentsNeat Image v8 StandaloneProfiles
You can select another location to store and use your Neat Image profiles if you prefer.

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Preset Folder
Select the folder where Neat Image must look for filter presets. This should be the topmost folder of all
the (sub)folders with filter presets. Neat Image will display all presets (stored in all subfolders of the
specified folder) in the popup menu in the Filter Settings panel of the application window and in other parts
of Neat Image.
By default, the Preset folder is located in your Documents folder:
DocumentsNeat Image v8 StandalonePresets
You can select another location to store and use your Neat Image presets if you prefer.

Show preset description on load

Enable this option to make Neat Image show the description of the filter preset when you load it from the
disk. The descriptions available in some presets (for example, in presets supplied with Neat Image) is
intended to help you get a better understanding of the purpose, applicability and possible side effects of
the preset.

Temporary folder
Select the folder that Neat Image must use to store its temporary files.

Folder History
Use independent load and save folders

Enable this option to make Neat Image use independent folders in its file open and save dialogs. If
disabled (the default setting), a save dialog will show the folder where the object (for example, a noise
profile) was loaded from.

Use independent folders for images/profiles/presets

Enable this option to make Neat Image use independent folders in its file dialogs for different types of
objects: images, noise profiles and filter presets. If disabled, Neat Images file dialogs will open the same
folder when working with different types of objects. By default, this option is enabled.

8.8. Output preferences


8.8.1. Save Settings
Allow overwriting existing image files
Enable this option to allow Neat Image overwrite existing image files when output images are auto saved
by the application (for example, when Neat Image automatically processes multiple images). Overwriting
may be required when you process the same image several times and want to replace the previous result.
Or if you need to save the output image with the same file name as the name of the input image.

Preserve image metadata in output image files (when possible)


Enable this option to make Neat Image preserve the EXIF, IPTC and other metadata by copying these
from the input to output images. Note that copying the metadata to the output image is not always
possible. This depends on both input and output file types used and on type of metadata as well. The EXIF
data are copied with the following combinations of input and output file types: JPEG-> JPEG, JPEG->
TIFF, TIFF-> TIFF, and TIFF-> JPEG. The IPTC data are copied with the following combinations:
JPEG-> JPEG and TIFF-> TIFF.

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Preserve original timestamp in output image files


Enable this option to make Neat Image preserve the original images file timestamp (the date and time
when the image file was created and/or modified) by copying it from the input to the output image file.
This will keep the output images in the same relative order as the input images when sorted by date and
time.
Important note: Do not enable this option if you use Neat Image as an external editor in Lightroom.
Otherwise Lightroom will not recognize that the image has been successfully processed by Neat Image.

Output bitdepth
This option controls the bitdepth of the images processed by the filter. For example, if the input image
has 8 bits per channel and the output bitdepth is selected to be 16 bits per channel, then the input image
will be converted to 16-bit representation, processed with the filter, and the output image will be 16-bit. If
Match input is selected then the output bitdepth will match the input bitdepth.

Output file name suffix


Select the suffix added to the output image file name by default (to differentiate processed images from
originals). Note that the suffix can be empty only if the Allow overwriting existing image files option is enabled
(see above).

Auto save output images


Enable this setting to let Neat Image automatically save output images when they are ready.

Save filtered images to


Folder(s) of input images
Enable this option to save each output image beside the corresponding input image.

Specified folder
Enable this option and specify a folder to make Neat Image save all output images to that folder.

Output file format


Format
Select the output file format to be used by default when the output image is saved by Neat Image.

Quality / Compression
Select the JPEG quality level (or PNG compression level) to be used by default when the output image is
saved by Neat Image in the JPEG (or PNG) format.

Auto remove completed tasks


Enable this option to automatically remove from the list of tasks (in other words, close) image filtration
tasks that have been fully processed and saved.

Use settings above to save output images (do not ask every time)
Enable this option to make Neat Image automatically save output images using the settings from this tab.
Neat Image will then silently save output images without opening the Save Settings dialog for every image.
In this way you can set the desired output settings once here and not be asked to adjust them each time
you save an output image.

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9. Command line version


Besides the GUI (graphical user interface) version of Neat Image, there is also a separate command line
(CL) version. It can also build noise profiles and filter one or more images.
To see how to use the command line version of Neat Image, open Windows Command Prompt and execute
the following command:
C:Program FilesNeat Image v8 StandaloneNeatImageCL.exe (with the quote marks)
or
C:Program Files (x86)Neat Image v8 StandaloneNeatImageCL.exe (for 32-bit NI in Win64)
This will display the description of command line format of the CL version. Use the description to
formulate new commands for the CL version.
Please note that the CL version of Neat Image uses the settings specified in the Preferences of the GUI
version. Therefore, if you want to adjust any of those settings please start the GUI version, adjust the
settings and apply, close the GUI version, and then use the CL version.

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10. Using Neat Image with Lightroom


Neat Image standalone can be used with Lightroom in two different ways:
1. You can manually save and load intermediate files to exchange images between Lightroom and
Neat Image.
2. Neat Image can be used via the External Editor facility available in Lightroom (this option is
available with Home and Pro edition of Neat Image standalone, Demo will not work).
To use the second method with either Home or Pro edition of Neat Image standalone (Win) you must set
up Neat Image as an external editor in Lightroom using the following steps:
1. In Lightroom, go to menu Edit | Preferences. . . | External Editing.
In Additional External Editor box, click Choose and select NeatImage.exe (in C:Program FilesNeat
Image v8 Standalone).
2. In the same Additional External Editor box, select
File Format: TIFF;
Bit Depth: 8 or 16 bits/component (depending on your images);
Adjust Color Space, Resolution and Compression as desired.
3. In the top of the Additional External Editor box, click the Preset drop-down and select the option:
Save Current Settings as New Preset.
Enter the name Neat Image and click the Create button.
4. Click OK to save changes.
From now on, you can use Neat Image as an external editor using the following steps:
1. Go to menu Photo (or right-click the image) and select Edit In >Neat Image.
2. In the Edit Photo with Neat Image dialog, select Edit a Copy or Edit a Copy with Lightroom Adjustments (and
uncheck Stack with original if that option is available in your version of Lightroom); then click Edit.
Lightroom will then save the image into a new TIFF file and invoke Neat Image for that file. Please
note that image will be converted to specified format (for example, to 16-bit TIFF, if that was
specified above) only when you select Copy with Lightroom Adjustments, otherwise Lightroom will
just copy the original image file.
Neat Image will add that new file as a new image filtration task and it will appear in the list of tasks
in Neat Image. If Neat Image has been already running, you may need to select that new task in the
list and click (the Edit selected filtration task button) or use the Task > Edit. . . menu item.
3. Process the image using the regular Neat Image workflow (see the section Filtration process details,
page 11, for more details).
In the end of the workflow, save the filtered image into the same TIFF file overwriting the input
image file (the file exported by Lightroom to Neat Image for processing).
Note: to facilitate overwriting input images, adjust the output settings in Neat Image Preferences:
go to menu Tools > Preferences > Output, make the Output file name suffix field empty and enable the Allow
overwriting existing image files option.

4. Close Neat Image.


5. You are now back in Lightroom and the TIFF image filtered by Neat Image is now also returned to
Lightroom. You can further work with that new image in your regular workflow.
Please note that you can also send several images to Neat Image instead of just one. To do that, select the
files you want to process and follow steps 1-5 above.

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11. Examples
11.1. Images to build a noise profile
The image below contains examples of areas that are good and bad from the standpoint of profiling.
Here, good image areas are highlighted in green, these should be at least 32x32 pixels large, preferably
more than 128x128 pixels; bad ones are highlighted in red. If the input image you have does contain
similar good flat featureless noise-only areas as shown in the example then you can be sure that Auto
Profile will produce an accurate noise profile. However, if there are no such flat featureless areas in the
input image, then Auto Profile will not work well because building a profile using an area containing details
produces an inaccurate profile that will then lead to very inaccurate filtration. In such a case, you can build
a noise profile using an alternative image containing flat featureless areas or you can use a shot of the
Calibration Target taken by the same camera working in the same mode.

Additional comments regarding the good and bad areas in this example are available in the next page.

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These image areas are good to build device noise profiles, as they contain no visible details

GOOD, because this area contains no important details

GOOD, no important details (this area is from another image)

Examples of bad areas that contain visible details:

BAD, because this area contains a detail: corner junction of wall and

ceiling

UNACCEPTABLE, because this area contains many details

BAD, because this area contains some details: some gradients caused by

differences in illumination of the area

See more examples of building noise profiles on the Neat Image web page:
https://ni.neatvideo.com/support/how-to-use/device-noise-profiling

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11.2. Filtration results


Here are some examples of Neat Image performance.
Input Output

This is a small portion of a digital photo taken with a compact digital camera. The original image contains
easily visible noise. In this case, the source of noise is the cameras image sensor (CCD) working in high
ISO mode.
Input Output

This image was also taken with a different digital camera. Along with the strong high ISO noise, there is
an image degradation caused by the JPEG compression. Even though Neat Image tries to do its best to
clean up such images, please avoid using strong JPEG compression.
See more filtration examples in the Neat Image web page: https://ni.neatvideo.com/examples

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

12. Questions and answers


12.1. General questions
Q What is the difference between Neat Image Demo, Home and Pro editions of Neat Image?
A Different editions have different functional capabilities and limitations as described by the Detailed
feature map, page 64.
Q Should I uninstall Demo edition prior to installing the Home / Pro edition?
A This is not necessary. You can install the Home / Pro edition over the Demo edition. Please make sure
Neat Image is completely closed when you install the Home / Pro edition.
Q Should I uninstall the older version of Neat Image prior to installing a newer one?
A This is not necessary. You can simply install a newer version of Neat Image. It will either replace the
old one or will be available along with the old one (depending on the version).
Q I think I have found a bug. How can I submit a bug report?
A Please use the online bug report form: https://ni.neatvideo.com/support/report-bug
Please fill it out to let us know all the details necessary to reproduce the problem.
See more information about bugs in the Known issues section in Neat Image webpage
(https://ni.neatvideo.com/support/known-issues) and about bug fixes in the WhatsNew.txt file supplied
with the software (also see the history section on the web page for the most up to date information:
https://ni.neatvideo.com/features/version-history/ni8sl?os-tab=win).
Q What about batch processing?
A Neat Image supports batch processing. Please see the Batch processing section, page 43.

12.2. Filtration-related questions


Q Why do I receive some crystal-like artifacts in the filtered image?
A The crystal-like artifacts (usually these are the residual compression artifacts or residual noise) look
like thin lines in the filtered image. They can be eliminated by increasing the (high frequency) noise
level in the filter settings or by using the dedicated Artifact Removal filter described in page 20.
Note: presence of many residual artifacts may be caused by using a poorly built, inaccurate noise
profile or a profile built for another device and/or device mode. Therefore the solution could be
re-building the noise profile.
Q Filtered image looks plastic. Why?
A The reason is that too much filtration has been applied. Let Neat Image keep some noise to produce
more natural-looking results. Adjust the noise reduction amounts; for example, set the Noise Reduction
Amount: Luminance control to 30-50%. Also, make sure the device noise profile does match the input
image processed. Using an incorrectly chosen or poorly built noise profile can either produce
plastic-looking results or leave residual artifacts (see the previous question).
Q What is frequency?
A The term (spatial) frequency is used in Neat Image to denote elements of an image (both important
details and noise/grain) of certain size.
High frequency corresponds to elements of smallest size. Medium (mid) frequency
corresponds to elements of medium size. Low, Very Low and Ultra Low frequency
correspond to elements of correspondingly larger sizes.
For reference, see the noise samples of different frequencies in the Noise Filter Settings tab
of the Neat Image window.

Q The filtration process is not very fast, is this normal?


A This is normal, because the Neat Image noise reduction algorithms are quite complex. We work on
further optimization to provide better performance.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

Q How to filter only the color noise (not the luminance noise)?
A Set the Noise Reduction Amount: Luminance control to 0%. This will disable the noise filter in the
luminance (brightness) channel.
Q What is YCrCb?
A YCrCb is the name of a family of color spaces widely used in digital imaging, television, video, etc. In
YCrCb , Y corresponds to the luminance channel , Cr to the Cr chrominance channel covering
the red to blue-green color range, Cb to the Cb chrominance channel covering the blue to yellow
color range. Because this space separates the luminance and chrominance information, it is used for
noise reduction where different processing is required in the luminance and chrominance channels.
Q Is processing via Neat Image best done before or after any other processing (i.e. tonal/color
correction)?
A Such operations as tonal/color correction are quite conservative from the standpoint of noise, that
is they do not significantly change the noise characteristics of the image. Therefore, reducing noise
before or after makes little difference as long as the noise profile is built and applied at the same
stage of your workflow. For example, do not use a noise profile built with an unprocessed (the color
correction is not yet applied) image to filter the same image after the color correction has been applied.
On the other hand, certain effects, like sharpening or resampling, applied to a noisy image may
considerably change its noise properties. In this sense, it is generally better to use Neat Image noise
reduction before applying such effects.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

13. Tips and tricks


13.1. Preventing banding
In some cases, the banding effect may appear when applying the noise filter to images with faint brightness
gradients. This effect is quite rare for normal images.
To avoid banding, try to reduce the noise reduction amount for the high frequency component to 50% or
lower to preserve some high frequency noise in the image.
Another option is to process the image in higher bitdepth.

13.2. Filtration of shadow areas


In some situations, it is preferable to filter only the shadow areas of images leaving bright areas intact.
You can do this by using the noise profile equalizer (available in the Device Noise Profile panel when working
in Advanced Mode) to limit or stop filtration of bright image areas.
The graph nodes in the noise profile equalizer correspond to particular ranges of brightness (individually
for each color channel) of the RGB color space. The vertical position of each node reflects the noise level
in the corresponding range of brightness. So, the lower a node is, the less filtration will eventually be
applied to image elements that belong to the corresponding range of brightness.
Therefore, to filter only shadows you can manually move all the bright nodes down (refer to the
gradients in the bottom of the noise profile equalizer to see which brightness level they correspond
to). For example, move down all but the three darkest nodes in each RGB channel.
Using this method, you can effectively prevent filtration of the bright image areas.

13.3. Partial filtration


Some images contain both noisy and clean areas and it may be preferable to filter only noisy areas. This
can be manually done by combining two images original and filtered one in an image editor. For
example, the following steps can be used:
1. Filter the input image in Neat Image (so that noisy areas are cleaned) and save the output image to
a new file;
2. Open this new file in your image editor;
3. Place the filtered image in a new layer on top of the original image;
4. Adjust the transparency of the top layer so that noisy areas look fine;
5. Select and delete the areas of the top layer where filtration is not necessary or excessive (you may
want to use the eraser tool with adjustable transparency and shape).

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

14. Information
14.1. Issues and bugs
Please report any bugs or issues you encounter while working with Neat Image. Use the online bug report
form: https://ni.neatvideo.com/support/report-bug.
Your feedback will greatly help us to improve the software and provide you with newer and better versions
of Neat Image.

14.2. Plans
The current version of Neat Image is the result of our ongoing research on noise filtration. We continue to
work on the core noise reduction algorithms to improve the quality and speed of noise reduction.
Please let us know if you have ideas that can make Neat Image better. Please participate in the discussions
taking place in the Neat Image forum: http://www.neatimage.net/forum/
Express your opinion, make suggestions and ask questions.

14.3. Detailed feature map


Features Neat Image
Demo Home Pro
Use for commercial purposes not allowed not allowed allowed
8 bit/channel (24-bit RGB, 8-bit Grayscale) +
Image
processing 16 bit/channel (48-bit RGB, 16-bit Grayscale) +
32 bit/channel (96-bit RGB, 32-bit Grayscale) +
Standalone version of the filter +
Maximum batch size 10 100 unlimited
Command line support in GUI version +
Command line version + +
1
JPEG 8 bits/channel +/+ +/+
TIFF (single image, no 8 bits/channel +/ 2 +/+
Workflow layers, no alpha
channel, no mask) 16 / 32
bits/channel +/ +/ +/+

BMP (uncompressed, 8 bits/channel +/ +/+


Win3x)
8 bits/channel +/ +/+
PNG
16 bits/channel +/ +/ +/+
Windows clipboard 8 bits/channel +/ +/+
Drag and drop (from Windows Explorer) +
3
Preserving image EXIF data in processed files +

Device Automatic profiling of cameras and scanners +


noise Manual profiling of any imaging devices +
profiles 4
Automatic matching profiles to input images +
Noise Channel components (Luminance, Cr, Cb) +
reduction Frequency components (High, Mid, Low, Very low, Ultra low) +
Smart Channel components (Luminance, Cr, Cb) +
sharpening Frequency components (High, Mid, Low) +
Filter presets (reusable filter settings) +

1 The JPEG compression is set to a fixed high quality level in Demo edition; the level is adjustable in Home and Pro editions.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

14.4. Contacts
We really appreciate your opinion of Neat Image. Please let us know what you think about the software.
Feel free to ask questions regarding Neat Image. You can contact us using the following means:

E-mails

[email protected] for general inquiries about Neat Image


[email protected] for technical questions regarding Neat Image standalone (Win)
[email protected] for inquiries regarding purchase and licensing of Neat Image

Forum
Register in the Neat Image community forum (http://www.neatimage.net/forum/) and participate in
discussions related to the use and development of Neat Image. The discussions there cover such topics as:
announcements of new and updated version of the software;
questions about use of Neat Image;
examples of using Neat Image with comments and suggestions;
feedback from the users: suggestions of new features and improvements;
general comments;
backup contacts.

Web page
https://ni.neatvideo.com

14.5. Legal information


Copyright
Neat Image 1999-2016 Neat Image team, ABSoft. All rights reserved.

License agreement
By downloading and/or in any way using the Neat Image (called Neat Image hereunder in this agreement)
software you indicate that you do accept this license agreement. If you are unable or unwilling to accept
this license agreement, then you may not use the Neat Image software and must return and/or destroy all
copies of Neat Image in your possession.

2 Here, +/ means that input is supported and output is not.


3 Whenever possible. Please see Preserve image metadata in output image files in page 43 for more details.
4 Whenever possible, based on availability of profile and image metadata.

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User Guide Neat Image v8 standalone application (Win)

You may

Use the Demo edition of Neat Image free of charge for non-commercial purposes only.
Copy and distribute the Demo edition of Neat Image.
Run the Home edition of Neat Image on one (or more, up to the number specified in your license)
computer (computers) at a time only for non-commercial purposes provided you are a registered user and
you have a valid license for the Home edition of Neat Image.
Run the Pro edition of Neat Image on one (or more, up to the number specified in your license) computer
(computers) at a time for commercial and other purposes provided you are a registered user and you have
a valid license for the Pro edition of Neat Image.

You may not

Sublicense, rent, lease and sell any version of Neat Image or any portion of it including the license data
without the explicit written permission from the Neat Image team, ABSoft.
Copy, share and distribute the Home and Pro edition of Neat Image or any portion of it including the
license data without the explicit written permission from the Neat Image team, ABSoft.
Decompile, disassemble, reverse engineer, modify, clone and emulate any version of the Neat Image
software or any portion of it including the license data.
Use the Home and Pro edition of Neat Image if you are not registered user.

Term and termination

If you are a registered user of the Home or Pro edition of Neat Image and you have purchased a license for
a specific major of Neat Image, then you may use this major version (including all minor updates of the
same major version) and edition of the software without time limitations provided you observe the terms
of this license agreement.
A license for a certain major version of Neat Image may be extended to a higher major version. By
decision of the Neat Image team, ABSoft, this extension may be automatic and free or may involve an
upgrade fee.
You may terminate this license agreement at any time by returning or destroying all copies of Neat Image
in your possession and notifying the Neat Image team.
Your rights derived from this license agreement will terminate immediately if you infringe upon the
Neat Image team, ABSofts copyrights or breach the terms of this agreement. Copyright infringement or
breaching this agreement may also result in criminal or civil prosecution.

Disclaimer of warranty

The authors make no warranty or representation, either express or implied, with respect to this software,
its quality, accuracy, merchantability, or fitness for a particular purpose. This software is provided as is,
and you, its user, assume the entire risk as to its quality and accuracy.

Distribution

The Demo edition of Neat Image may be distributed unmodified provided any charge is to cover distribution
costs only.
The Demo edition of Neat Image may be placed on magazine CDs/DVDs as long as the Neat Image team
is informed.

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14.6. Registration
To become a registered user and to get a fully functional copy of Neat Image Home or Pro edition you
need to purchase a license (a single- or multi-user license). Please find the detailed information in the
Purchase section of the Neat Image web page: https://ni.neatvideo.com/purchase
After purchasing a license, you receive an e-mail from the Neat Image team with detailed download and
registration instructions. Using those you will be able to download, install and register the software on
your computer.
By becoming a registered user of Neat Image Home or Pro edition you will:
Encourage the authors to further improve the software and make it better suited for your needs;
Get access to all functions of Neat Image Home or Pro edition (see the Detailed feature map, page 64);
Pro edition only: be able to use Neat Image for commercial purposes;
Get free updates of the software (minor modifications with the same major version number, for
example, updates from the version v8.0 to any v8.x);
Enjoy reduced upgrade prices for new major versions of Neat Image, for example when upgrading
from v7 to v8;
Receive the primary attention of Neat Image support group;
Receive the primary attention of Neat Image development group
(tell us what you want to see in the next update or new version).

Message from Neat Image team


By purchasing our product you are helping us to further develop and improve the software.
Become a registered user and we will make Neat Image better for YOU!

14.7. Acknowledgments
Neat Image utilizes the IJG JPEG library developed by the Independent JPEG Group. Neat Image utilizes
the openTIFF library developed by George Sotak. Neat Image utilizes the zlib library developed by
Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler. Neat Image utilizes the libpng library developed by Glenn Randers-Pehrson.
Thank you to all the users who contribute by proposing improvements and new features. Thanks to all the
people who help us to find bugs in Neat Image. Thank you to all the users who stimulate the development
of Neat Image by their word and deed. It wouldnt be Neat without all of you!
Neat Image team, ABSoft

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Index
Artifact Removal, 20 noise level, 15, 18
Check Speed, 16, 23 noise reduction amount, 15, 18
Edge Smoothing, 21 filter preset, 23
Filter Tuning Mode, 19 description, 24
Filter, 15, 18 load, 24
Noise Level, 15, 18, 20 save, 23
Noise Reduction Amount, 15, 18, 19 filter settings, 15
Optimize Settings, 16 filter tuning mode, 19
Optimize, 23 frequency, 61
Sharpening, 16, 22 high, 20, 61
low, 61
artifact removal, 20 mid, medium, 61
frequency range, 7, 59
batch processing, 43
GPU acceleration
color noise, 20, 62 CUDA, 5
color space OpenCL, 5
chrominance, 62
luminance, 62 high ISO noise, 7, 60
YCrCb, 62
componet viewer, 41 image filtration job, 43
contacts, 65 defaults, 49
forum, 65 editing, 46
web page, 65 removing, 48

detail recovery, 21 license agreement, 65


device noise profile, 12
batch profiler, 35 noise filter, 7, 18
building, 26 noise level, 18, 20
automatic, 28 noise reduction amount, 18, 19
for a certain mode, 26
partial filtration, 63
for different modes, 33
performance settings
manual, 29
optimize, 16, 23
using calibration target, 30
preferences, 49
using regular image, 27
preview, 16, 22
quality indicator, 28
profile matching, 13, 38
ready-made, 26
viewer, 42 quality mode, 17
edge smoothing, 21 registration, 67
examples, 58
sharpening, 16, 22
feature map, 64 system requirements, 5
features, 4, 64
filter, 15, 18 variants of filtration, 40

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