Topaz DeNoise AI offers a masking brush for selective local denoising. You can get a free trial version that has no time limit, but files you save with it will be watermarked across the middle, so as not to be usable. You can get Topaz DeNoise AI directly as a download from its maker’s website for $79.99, though that list price is occasionally discounted. Both are excellent products, and your choice depends on the type of photos you have and how much control you want over the process. Though I was less than thrilled with Topaz's all-around photo software Topaz Studio, the company’s noise reducer is at least as good as DxO’s, and in some ways even better. Topaz DeNoise is far more effective at removing noise artifacts than Lightroom, Photoshop, and other general photo-editing software, which require you to fiddle with sliders and don’t produce as good results on high-ISO digital photos. It gives you more control over its operation than its closest competitor, DxO PureRAW, which is also excellent at what it does. Topaz DeNoise AI excels at one specific job: clearing out digital noise from your photos. Lightroom/Photoshop plug-in workflow is less integrated than that of DxO PureRAW.No photo browser-only one photo at a time.
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