The Best Noise Reduction Software for Landscape Photographers

The Best Noise Reduction Software for Landscape Photographers
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Landscape photographer Michael Shainblum’s latest video takes a very close look at noise reduction software, specifically when using noise reduction on landscape images. Shainblum published an article on his website that includes sample images and crops, which are more beneficial than viewing comparisons in the YouTube video featured below.

Shainblum compares two images, a high ISO night sky image and a daytime landscape photo, using Topaz Labs’ Denoise AI and Adobe Lightroom’s built-in Denoise Tool. Like Topaz Labs’ Denoise AI, Adobe’s newly announced Denoise feature uses artificial intelligence (AI) and promises improved results compared to Lightroom’s standard noise reduction sliders.

Shainblum does not talk about DxO PureRAW 3 in his video, but he includes numerous comparison images in his article and writes, “DxO performed well for the most part, and I did enjoy the simplicity, similar to Lightroom. All I had to do was input the RAW file, and the software did the work for me.”

Michael Shainblum noise reduction for landscape photography
The original night sky image has nice color and detail, but also includes a fair bit of visible noise that Shainblum wants to remove with noise reduction software.
Michael Shainblum noise reduction for landscape photography
Shainblum tested a pair of images, including this daytime landscape shot.

Lightroom Denoise is a straightforward noise reduction tool. When enabled, a single slider adjusts strength from 0 to 100. “I personally wouldn’t go over 50%,” Shainblum explains when editing a Milky Way shot. “On images with less noise, maybe 30 or 40%,” he adds.

Michael Shainblum noise reduction for landscape photography
Lightroom’s new Denoise tool is very simple. Its user interface includes a single slider to adjust the strength.

As Shainblum shows, Lightroom Denoise delivers impressive results, doing a great job at removing visible noise without removing much fine detail. Night sky images are particularly challenging for noise reduction software, as night photos are typically shot at high ISO and include a lot of very faint stars. Aggressive noise reduction can smudge larger stars and completely remove smaller ones, which is not ideal.

Michael Shainblum noise reduction for landscape photography
On the other hand, Topaz’s Denoise AI app has quite a few controls and tools.

Compared to manual noise reduction in Lightroom, Shainblum explains that Denoise does a better job preserving detail and colors, all while being easier to use.

Topaz Labs’ Denoise AI is considered among the best noise reduction solutions on the market, so how does it compare to Lightroom’s new Denoise tool? Compared to Denoise AI, Shainblum thinks Lightroom’s Denoise feature “Did a much better job retaining the color and details here, while still removing a bit more noise than Topaz.”

Michael Shainblum noise reduction for landscape photography
Lightroom Denoise (left) versus Topaz Denoise (right)

“I really have to hand it to the Lightroom team here. This tool is absolutely fantastic, and there is something to be said about the simplicity here. All I had to do was move one slider, and it came out perfect every time,” Shainblum concludes.

Michael Shainblum noise reduction for landscape photography
Shainblum also tested DxO PureRAW 3, which like Lightroom Denoise, is quite simple to use.

Many more insights and head-to-head comparisons are available in Shainblum’s complete write-up. Photographers seeking to use other versatile AI-powered tools in Lightroom can learn about five Lightroom masking techniques in another of Shainblum’s recent videos.


Image credits: All images © Michael Shainblum

Real Photo Disqualified From Photography Contest For Being AI

Real Photo Disqualified From Photography Contest For Being AI
A real photo that was disqualified from a photo competition for being an AI image
Suzi Dougherty’s photo of her son Caspar with two mannequins that was deemed to be AI by a panel of judges.

A genuine picture taken on an iPhone was thrown out of a photography competition after the judges suspected that it was generated by artificial intelligence (AI).

Suzi Dougherty had captured a striking photo of her son with two smartly-dressed mannequins in an intriguing pose while visiting a Gucci exhibition. Happy with her creation, she entered it into a photo competition.

Dougherty didn’t think much more of it until a friend showed her an Instagram post declaring her photo ineligible because the competition’s organizers suspected it to be an AI image.

“I wouldn’t even know how to do an AI photo,” Dougherty tells The Guardian. “I’m just getting my head around ChatGPT.”

The photo competition was held by Charing Cross Photo, a store in Sydney, Australia. In their Instagram post disqualifying Dougherty’s photo, the judges say they were “first intrigued” but then “suspicion set in.”

“We want the images to come from your real-life experience, and not sourced from cyberspace,” writes Charing Cross Photo.

“There is no way we can be completely sure the image submitted was made by AI but you really can’t ignore the gut instincts of four judges.”

Charing Cross Photo owner Iain Anderson tells The Guardian that the judges looked at the metadata on the image but weren’t able to tell if the image was AI-generated or not.

“When this image came up, we all loved it, then I said ‘Hang on it looks a little AI-ish’, then we all started talking about it and went well, we can’t know for sure it is or isn’t, but on the basis we’re suspicious we can’t allow it in,” says Anderson.

“It gave us an opportunity to reinforce that this is about taking the image yourself, being present in the environment.”

An Apology, Of Sorts

Yesterday, Charing Cross Photo made an Instagram post saying they spoke to Dougherty and confirmed the photo is real.

They called the photo a “great play on what is real” and what is not. But it was too late for Dougherty to win the $333 (500 Australian dollars) prize because her photo had already been rejected from the competition.

However, Charing Cross Photo has offered to waive Dougherty’s entry fee for the next photo competition.

“I probably will [enter] — just for fun,” she adds.


Image credits: All photos by Suzi Dougherty.

#PlacesofNEI: Colorful creations filled Main Street for the return of Chalk Walk

#PlacesofNEI: Colorful creations filled Main Street for the return of Chalk Walk
Northeast Indiana is evolving. These are the people and places shaping its future.

#PeopleofNEI #PlacesofNEI

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Stephen J. Bailey is a Fort Wayne native and the owner of PH Digital that was founded in 2006. Based out of the Anthony Wayne Building in downtown Fort Wayne, he specializes in web development, SEO development, social media management, and digital marketing campaigns with numerous companies in northeast Indiana. Stephen loves road trips, sushi, his pups, and spending time on our three rivers.

UW and Wyoming SBDC Network to Host Workshop in Lander July 18

UW and Wyoming SBDC Network to Host Workshop in Lander July 18
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For anyone contemplating starting a small business, the thought alone can be daunting.
However, advice and assistance are available.

Audie Cunningham will discuss the basics of starting a business during a Wyoming Small
Business Development Center (SBDC) Network workshop titled “Start Your Own Business”
Tuesday, July 18, from 5:30-6:30 p.m. at the Lander Library, located at 451 N. Second
St. To register, go here. Registration is free.

The Wyoming SBDC Network offers business expertise to help Wyoming residents think
about, launch, grow, reinvent or exit their business. The Wyoming SBDC Network is
hosted by the University of Wyoming with state funds from the Wyoming Business Council
and funded, in part, through a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Small Business
Administration.

Topics to be covered include helpful startup tools, sources of business capital and
a business plan overview.

Cunningham is the Wyoming SBDC Network’s regional director for Fremont and Teton counties.
She enjoys seeing community members bring their business ideas to life and is eager
to help them grow and thrive. As an entrepreneur, Cunningham has worked in art licensing
and graphic design, and she has 10 years of experience in customer service and marketing
through her work in public libraries. Her education and experience have given her
knowledge in print and digital marketing, creating marketing plans, social media marketing
and business planning.

For more information, call Maureen Johnson, marketing, communication and database
manager for the Wyoming SBDC Network, at (307) 343-0925 or email mjohn125@uwyo.edu.

Inside Ross Sklar’s Acquisition Spree As Starco Brands Targets Growth

Inside Ross Sklar’s Acquisition Spree As Starco Brands Targets Growth

How do you build a multi-million-dollar business from scratch? For Ross Sklar, who has done exactly that with Starco Brands since launching the company in its current guise four years ago, the answer might be summarised as play to your strengths. Entrepreneur Sklar has expanded Starco through a combination of careful management and strategic acquisitions, largely eschewing day-to-day involvement in operational affairs in favour of driving collaboration and making smart appointments.

“My skills lie in getting deals done and in bringing people together,” explains Sklar. “If you can recruit the best talent to run your businesses, you’ve got a real chance of making it work.”

It’s an approach that has seen Starco make three significant acquisitions since Forbes first met the company, a little under two years ago. First, in September 2022, it acquired Art of Sport, a personal care business aimed at athletes and sports players co-founded by the basketball star Kobe Bryant. That was followed in January by the acquisition of Skylar, which produces a range of hypoallergenic fragrances, and then in February with a deal to acquire Soylent, a company that manufactures plant-based drinks.

With the global economy stuttering and businesses everywhere still suffering from the after effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, this period might not have been an obvious time to launch an M&A spree. Indeed, globally, M&A deal volumes have fallen off a cliff over the past year.

However, Sklar believes that is exactly the time to pursue new opportunities. “I’ve always thought that distressed times can be the moment to make your move,” he argues. “If you sit back and lick your wounds, you almost always discover that you’ve missed an opportunity.”

Each of the Starco acquisitions provides an example of that. First, with Art of Sport, Sklar had been a fan of the business well before the tragic death of Bryant in 2020 but noted its subsequent struggles in the face of Covid-19. “We started to talk to the management about how we could help,” Sklar explains. “What we saw was a business with a huge opportunity to play in so many different segments, because it wasn’t simply a sports and leisure brand.”

The company’s existing range of body and skincare products, designed specifically with athletes in mind, has had some traction, Sklar points out, but he also sees potential to expand into areas such as sports drinks, supplements and similar products. The sport drinks market alone is growing at a rate of 4.8% a year according to research from Allied Market Research and could be worth as much as $22 billion globally by 2031.

At Skylar, meanwhile, Sklar was excited by a business that had been “developed by a great founder with huge vision”. Skylar had developed the first mass-market hypo-allergenic range of prestige fragrances, targeting a younger customer base prepared to try different fragrances and to sign up to subscription deals. But it had been run for scale rather than for profit. “The products were unique,” Sklar says.

Again, it’s a huge market with untapped potential. Products for sensitive skin racked up sales of more than $40 billion last year according to Grand View Research, with the market set to grow at a rate of almost 9% a year. Yet few businesses have identified fragrances as a potentially valuable subset of that marketplace.

As for acquisition number three, Soylent taps into huge demand from customers concerned about their health and wellbeing, which continues to grow in the wake of the pandemic. Products such as Soylent’s drinks are bought by customers focused on tracking the nutritional benefits of what they consume, but more broadly there is growing interest in drinks as potential meal replacements. Statista forecasts that the value of plant-based nutrition market could grow from around $29 billion in 2020 to as much as $162 billion by 2030. “There is also an opportunity to make nutrition accessible to everyone,” says Sklar, who points out that cash-strapped families could also find the product useful as they seek to eat healthily.

Sklar’s focus now is to strengthen the businesses acquired by enabling them to tap into the broader group’s expertise and experience. Soylent, for example, could benefit from Starco’s track record in experiential marketing – it has worked closely with music star Cardi B to build a brand for its Whipshots business, which sells vodka-infused whipped cream. All three businesses are tapping into some sort of behavioural change in broader society, Sklar points out, so that creates opportunities for idea sharing and innovation too.

Across Starco Brands as a whole, revenues have now grown to around $70 million a year. The company is listed on the OTC market, the decentralised stock market through which investors can buy and sell stocks in early-stage and developing companies. That has been important, in that it has enabled Starco to grow partly through financing deals with its own stock.

“This is the value-building stage for the business,” reflects Sklar. “Are we looking to the senior exchanges such as Nasdaq or New York? Yes, but we don’t feel any pressure and we’ll do it on our timescale.” In the meantime, private equity and venture capital investors in the sort of businesses that Starco is targeting have an opportunity to take a stake in the company when selling out of their own portfolio holdings. Andreessen Horowitz, GV, Upfront Ventures and Lightspeed Partners have all become Starco shareholders in this way.

Entrepreneurs have to be patient, picking their opportunities carefully, Sklar insists. It’s something he learned while building the Starco Group, which over the past 20 years has assembled a string of consumer products businesses, either through organic innovation or acquisition. The realisation that Starco wasn’t capturing the full value of its intellectual property led to the launch of Starco Brands, and now Sklar hopes he’s on his way to closing that gap.

Gerendák Residence: Where Architecture Blends Music and Nature

Gerendák Residence: Where Architecture Blends Music and Nature

Wittehaus, the architectural firm led by renowned architect Toby Witte, recently unveiled their latest project in Charlotte, North Carolina – the Gerendák Residence. The striking residence incorporates cantilevers overlooking Lake Wylie and a harmonious blend of form and function. The inspiration for Gerendák stemmed from the client’s that are entrenched in Charlotte’s art scene who were fascinated by the Netflix series “The World’s Most Extraordinary Homes.” They sought to create a home that would rival those showcased on the TV show. With a keen eye for detail and lots of back and forth with the clients, Wittehaus was able to create a show-worthy home that met the couple’s needs and desires.

Two significant factors shaped the design of Gerendák. First, the challenge of incorporating cantilevers that extended out above Lake Wylie without the need for staircases. To overcome this obstacle, they built stone walls that are meticulously carved into the hill, forming a sturdy platform that supports the house. With this foundation in place, the house itself seemingly floats on the edge of an artificial cliff, allowing the homeowners to effortlessly access their abode from ground level on one side, while experiencing the sensation of being suspended in the air on the other.

angled interior view of modern kitchen

The second defining aspect of Gerendák lies in its musical inspiration. Wittehaus integrated the homeowners’ passion for music into the design, especially in their music room where their baby grand piano lives.

angled interior view of open living space in modern home with windows surrounding

The main living space that houses the kitchen, dining room, and living room feels as if it’s suspended in the surrounding trees. The open room is held up structurally by exposed beams and posts as it juts out with a covered exterior terrace. Thanks to the structural system, three sides of the space could be enclosed with glass giving it the living amongst the trees feeling.

angled interior view of modern living space with high ceilings and light wood floors

interior view in modern house down hallway flanked with windows

Beyond its artistic allure, Gerendák embodies sustainability and eco-consciousness. The residence boasts a remarkable array of green features, including solar panels, high-performance windows, spray foam insulation, a tankless water heater, and an Energy Star rating. With a low HERS Index rating, the house achieves optimal energy efficiency. The project also demonstrates a commitment to tree conservation, utilizing reclaimed wood from the site to create custom furniture pieces.

angled view into white room with black bars offering privacy with black grand piano

interior view in modern home's hallway

interior view of modern staircase looking up open wood treads

Floating wood stairs by the piano room lead downstairs to the guest wing, carrying down the same vertical metal rods that act as balustrades.

modern blue chair with ottoman in the corner of a room in modern home with floor to ceiling windows

Geri Eaker from Freespace Design lent her interior design expertise, helping to bring the architect’s vision to life while creating spaces that seamlessly blend style and functionality.

angled view in dark modern bathroom

exterior view of modern house wrapped around a large pool

exterior view of modern house wrapped around a large pool

exterior view of cantilevered room off of modern house

view up hill looking at modern home exterior with cantilevered rooms

angled up view of corner of modern house with pillars

angled exterior view of modern grey house with cantilevered rooms

angled exterior view of modern grey house with cantilevered rooms

angled exterior view of modern grey house with cantilevered rooms

angled exterior view of modern grey house with cantilevered rooms

closeup angled view of exterior wall of modern home

closeup exterior view of modern house path to front door

exterior front view of large modern grey and wood house

Architect: Toby Witte of Wittehaus
Builder: Buddy Edwards of Lynn Luxury Homes
Interior Design: Geri Eaker of Freespace Design
Photography: Amanda Anderson

Caroline Williamson is Editor-in-Chief of Design Milk. She has a BFA in photography from SCAD and can usually be found searching for vintage wares, doing New York Times crossword puzzles in pen, or reworking playlists on Spotify.