

It's pretty faint here because of the screencam capture and encoding, but in your own projects, when you capture a noise print for noise reduction and open the Noise Reduction dialog, and then click this button, you should be able to hear-with the effect toggled off-the noise that you're attempting to reduce. At the 6:48 mark, you can hear the audio from this clip with the noise reduction effect toggled on and off. I've reposted this article's companion video clip below for reference. The Effect - Noise Reduction dialog with the power state button (which toggles the effect on and off) highlighted

Sometimes, at the other side of the equation, you can also hear if you're introducing any distortion by applying the noise reduction effect.įigure 20. Then click the icon to the left of it, which toggles on and off the effect, and enables you to hear the impact of the effect and to hear if you're removing the noise. First, click the Preview button in the lower-left corner. There are a couple of things I recommend doing in this dialog before applying the effect. Processing the noise print Working in the Effect – Noise Reduction Dialogįigure 20 (below) shows the Effect – Noise Reduction dialog, where we'll be working for most of the rest of the tutorial. Then choose Effects > Noise Reduction/Restoration > Noise Reduction (process) ( Figure 19, below).įigure 19. By doing so you tell Audition, "That's the noise I want you to remove." When the Capture Noise Print dialog appears, click OK. Then choose Effects > Noise Reduction > Capture Noise Print ( Figure 18, below). Zoom into a small region in the file that doesn't have any speech or other real audio in it, just the noise. The first step is to tell Audition what the noise is.
REMOVE BACKGROUND NOISE ADOBE AUDITION CC MANUAL
Next we'll try manual noise reduction, which is a two-step process.
