Panasonic G85 Noise Reduction

The Panasonic G85 offers no fewer than 11(!)  noise reduction levels, offering very fine granularity on noise reduction strength, however there doesn't appear to be a way to assign different NR levels to specific ISO ranges as we've seen on some cameras. The Panasonic G85 user manual doesn't say when noise reduction kicks in, so we've included crops from the entire range of ISOs in the tables below.

See for yourself how the Panasonic G85's default and -5 (lowest) noise reduction settings compare to RAW without noise reduction under daylight-balanced lighting. (Note that these RAW images also have no sharpening applied, so they're softer than camera JPEGs.) Click on any of the crops below to see the corresponding full-sized image.

High ISO Noise Reduction Comparison
Daylight-balanced illumination
Default
-5
RAW (no NR)
I
S
O

1
0
0
Default
-5
RAW (no NR)
I
S
O

2
0
0
Default
-5
RAW (no NR)
I
S
O

4
0
0
Default
-5
RAW (no NR)
I
S
O

8
0
0
Default
-5
RAW (no NR)
I
S
O

1
6
0
0
Default
-5
RAW (no NR)
I
S
O

3
2
0
0
Default
-5
RAW (no NR)
I
S
O

6
4
0
0
Default
-5
RAW (no NR)
I
S
O

1
2
8
0
0
Default
-5
RAW (no NR)
I
S
O

2
5
6
0
0

The Panasonic G85's default noise reduction setting provides a good tradeoff between noise and detail at lower ISOs to our eye, but it has quite an impact on our difficult red-leaf swatch atlready at low ISOs, and turning noise reduction down to the lowest strength doesn't help that much. Still, we'd probably shoot with the lowest setting at higher ISOs and reduce noise ourselves in post-processing (or just shoot RAW). As you can see, the G85 already applies noise reduction at its lowest (extended) ISO of 100. At the other end of the ISO range, you can see that the G85 is quite effective at reducing chroma noise, even at the lowest NR setting.

 

Buy the Panasonic G85



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