Topaz Video Enhance Ai 2.6.4 Download

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Skyy Mansour

unread,
Aug 4, 2024, 11:07:22 PM8/4/24
to xifupartcom
terryleemartin13as a workaround you could save / export as png in Video Enhance AI, if you have the disk space. That way, if it crashes, you should be able to restart the program and pick it back up at the exact frame where it crashed.

But Video Enhance AI should really do this on its own for anamorphic content, since it produces superior results when scaling such content as 1:1 FIRST, then desqueezing and resizing to the final dimensions.


Video Enhance AI Could USE Pro Formats Like ProRez ,DNxHD and DNxHR .Also Mov and AVI Formats Uncompressed Video Formats.AI could be Dime on active frame. Features From Denoise AI,Sharpen AI Adjust AI Giga Pixel AI could be Added too.Video Editor Programs Like Pinnacle Studio use Public codecs like FFMPEG .Perhasp Video Enhance AI would better as Effect Plugin for Adobe or Vegas17.Standalone Video Enhance AI could read the metadata to Denise And enhance it.


Through the support forums, I found this was a symptom of interlaced video. A small sample encode made me think I was right, but when I let the whole thing finish the audio was so far off at the end that it was unusable.


If they are, you could try (if you have the drive space) extracting every frame as a png from the Video Enhance AI output, then recombining them with the exact frame rate from the DVD.


Meanwhile the best and most impressive results I get, if I downscale up or down to 640x480 and then using the CG render modus with 200%.

I guess, the AI learnings are not below or above 640x480.

This should fixed by time.


Seeing the comments about interlaced video I will def try this for my next test (I assumes you could not use interlaced video). Quick question - does anyone know, if I import 25i video will the exported video be 50p? Currently I am encoding interlaced videos with bob de-interlacing and double the frame rate to keep the same motion. Does/will Video Enhance do this automatically?


OK, my before named settings for post production working mostly pretty good for footage of e.g towns.

For landscape footage, I test now, no settings and no up-/downscaling before using VEAI are helping:

VEAI consequencly adds small structures on trees and grass. The results are always not useful.


With the new upscaling feature of Photoshop/Bridge Enhance image you can double the size of the original image while still maintaining image quality and details. I tried this feature on a bunch of different images and compared it with Topaz Gigapixel Ai which I already owned and used a lot in the past. I can right away say that the results are pretty close, but there is a clear winner here.


Topaz Gigapixel Ai I have been using for a while now and I was always amazed with the results it produced, so if course I was very curious if the Photoshop Enhance feature would also give similar results.

One of the things I never liked with Gigapixel was its speed and intensive use of my computer power. I do most of my work on a laptop so upscaling could sometimes take up a couple of minutes raising the heat of the computer making the fans kick off.

Photoshop Enhance after my first try was blazing fast in comparison with Gigapixel, so on speed Photoshop scores point in this area straight away.


The Photoshop Enhance upscaler can only be used once (but saving it as a new file and repeating the enhance feature will work but this will not give the best results) so you are able to double the size. The Gigapixel Ai upscaler can go way bigger. Of course upscaling too far will not result in great quality but Gigapixel times 4 upscaling compared to enhancing twice did give noticeably better results.


Was just curious if anyone know any apps that can enhance video quality? Like if I have some old 4:3, maybe there a way or an app to bump it up to HD without much loss. I hear AI is changing the field.


There's a few things out there but there's a FCPX plugin called Image Sharpener 2 that is quite good and inexpensive. I've used it on some old DV SD footage with nice results. You can get it through FX Factory


the one linked there is to the image inhancer product, not the video one. From what I've seen it's heavy usage on the CPU/GPU so it can take a lot of resources and time to enhance video but the results are impressive.


Had great luck up-rezzing (spelling?) a color transfer that came in at 2k. Footage was great, just too small. Topaz rocked it out, but I did not figure out how to carry timecode across and the missing first frame issue is still there. Also, no ProRes 4444 support - so I went with ProRes422HQ.


To fix the timecode - I re-ingested without caching the original 2k clips, set to 4k on ingest, then put the new up-rezzed clips on top, re-exported in case the editor wanted the 4k plates.


You should have a moan about it on their feedback forum. I had a massive winge about the preview system not being as good as it used to be. This really sweet girl from topaz development organised a zoom call, and I ended up going through everything I wanted added or fixed. In the new version 4 I can see some of it has been implemented.

She was really chuffed to understand what a really pro user needed.


When it comes to enhancing video quality, you may find yourself pondering two fundamental questions: What is the best way to enhance video quality? And which video quality enhancer stands out from the rest? Among the available options, Topaz Video AI is one of the best video quality enhancers, favored by numerous users encountering the situations outlined below:


1. You downloaded the low-resolution videos that lack visual quality from platforms like YouTube. Take, for instance, Taylor Swift's "Love Story" music video, filmed back in 2008. The currently available version is limited to a mere 480p resolution. However, thanks to video quality enhancers, we now have access to stunning 4K remastered versions.


2. You recently copied digital versions of family VHS tapes, DVDs or VCDs, but the output video turned out to be very fuzzy, noisy, interlaced, and low resolution. You are seeking a good video quality enhancer that can magically transform them into high quality.


For those who come across the situations mentioned above and seeking to enhance video quality using Topaz Video AI, keep reading to discover this most comprehensive tutorial for more valuable insights and guidance. Here we take V4.0.0 as the demonstration.


To begin our exploration of how to enhance video quality by using Topaz Video AI, let's first get to know the program's user interface and familiarize ourselves with its AI Filters and their corresponding AI Models. By doing this, you will gain a comprehensive understanding of the main features before diving into the techniques for enhancing video quality.


Before get started, please make sure your Windows has a dedicated GPU (NVIDIA GTX 900 or higher, AMD Radeon 400 or higher, Intel UHD 600 Graphics or higher) with at least 4GB GPU memory, or your Mac has M1 or M2 chip.


After importing a video, you will see the interface as shown below. It seems a little bit confusing at first glance but it is still easy to get started. The interface was more complicated before V3.0.0.


Frame Interpolation: Create new frames for FPS conversion or slow motion effect. For example, you can select this filter to convert FTS from 30 to 60 or create 2x, 4x, or 8x slow motion.


Enhancement: Improve the visual quality of the video. This filter is tailored to improve the quality of three kinds of videos, including progressive, interlaced, and interlaced progressive video. If you are not sure which one you should choose, please refer to the following explanation.


Topaz Video AI V4.0.0 offers 9 AI models in total. It removes some outdated models and organizes all models by AI filters since V3.0.0, thus allowing its users can choose the right AI models more easily than before. If you are still trying to figure out the difference between the models and have no idea about what model to use, you can look at the explanations for each model.


Iris - Face /LQ/MQ: Iris is Topaz's first face enhancement AI model, released in June 2023. It is recommended for very low-resolution and medium-resolution videos and works best on interlaced, noisy, or compressed footage with degraded faces.


Nyx - HQ Denoise: The denoise model reduces noise and fixes compression artifacts. It is optimized for denoising high-resolution videos captured in dark lighting conditions with high ISO settings.


Please wait while the Setup Wizard installs Topaz Video AI. Once the installation is complete, launch Topaz Video AI to step in the welcome interface in which you can select to activate the program so as to access the full version or try the app for free.


Select a Preset: From the Presets window, choose a preset that fully fits your requirements. Here we take "Upscale to 4K" as an example. By choosing "Upscale to 4K" as the preset, the corresponding enhancement filters, output resolution, and output format will be activated automatically.


If you are already familiar with the program, you can take control of the program by manually choosing AI filters, AI Models, Video Type, and tailoring the output (resolution, bitrate, quality level, format, and more) to your exact preferences.


By organizing each AI filter with customizable and fine-tuning options, you have the flexibility to simultaneously select multiple filters. For instance, you can upscale video to 4K and convert it to 60 FPS by selecting both Frame Interpolation and Enhancement as the AI filters.


To configure the AI Filters and AI Models, you have two options: selecting a Preset or manually adjusting the settings yourself. Once you've made your selection, click the button next to "Export As" to open the output settings window. Here, you can customize various aspects including the Encoder, Profile, GPU, Bitrate, Quality Level, Audio Mode, and Container.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages