5. Noise Reduction using image stacks.

It is a well known fact that digital cameras have increasing noise levels using high(er) ISO values in low light conditions.
Most modern cameras nowadays have builtin noise reduction systems to overcome this noise. These builtin systems mostly come in 2-3 steps ranging from light correction (leaving more noise, but preserving sharpness in the photo) to aggressive noise reduction (removing most of the noise at the cost of sharpness, thereby creating more blurred photos).

Noise is random. It is therefore also randomly distributed in your photo. Making image stacks and merging them into one image will reduce these random patterns. The better imaging software contain filters to allow you to merge image stacks by layering them and working with opacity (or other options).
Enfuse (using Imagefuser) is much simpler. Just feed a stack of images into ImageFuser and it will merge them fine using enfuse, thereby removing the random pixels that give the noise in your images.
A method I often use, is by using the "(high) speed burst" mode on my camera. The "(high) speed burst" mode is normally meant for fast changing scenes, e.g. sports, to capture the right moment. It's also a great mode to swiftly capture a stack of images.

For this example I just positioned the tripod, set my camera to "(high) speed burst" mode, pressed the release button for approx. 3 seconds and had 24 images: easy as that. (Never mind the composition, it's only an example)
(Off course: In low light conditions your high speed burst mode might end up in a reduced speed burst mode due to longer shutter speeds. Still you can capture quite some images in short time). In the table below you will find the: single exposure, 6 merged exposures, 12 merged exposures and 24 merged exposures.

Normal images
Single Exposure
Full size

6 merged exposures
Full size

12 merged exposures
Full size

24 merged exposures
Full size
Cropped images
Single Exposure
Full size

6 merged exposures
Full size

12 merged exposures
Full size

24 merged exposures
Full size
Cropped images 200%
Single Exposure
Full size

6 merged exposures
Full size

12 merged exposures
Full size

24 merged exposures
Full size
Note: you might need to click the image in the opened window in Firefox or Safari to get the full-size image. In IE Explorer you might need to click the bottom-right corner of the image

If you examine the "single exposure" image you will see severe noise in the whitish wall, the green vases, the cardboard box and in the beech wood dresser. From the above examples you can see the noise is strongly reduced in the "6 merged exposures" and almost no longer existent in the "12 merged exposure" version. The "24 merged exposure" is even better.
Quality is always relative. Decide for yourself how far you want to go.

Exposure fusion and noise reduction.

The exposure fusion and noise reduction can be combined if neccessary. Say you want to photograph a city skyline at night, or a nice building at night enlighted with spotlights. This is a perfect situation for enfuse. You take for example images at -3, -1.5, 0, 1.5 and 3 EV and get a nicely fused image. It might still contain quite some noise. Shoot e.g. 4+ (the more, the better) images at -3, at -1.5, at 0, at 1.5 and at 3 EV and feed this 20+ images into ImageFuser. The result will be a nicely fused image with hardly any noise.

Some last notes and remarks.

[1]: Gimp plug-in-unsharp-mask
[2]: Unsharp Mask
[3]: panotools wiki image Stacking

© 2008-2010, Harry van der Wolf