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This post applies to Adobe Camera Raw plug-in.
Adobe Camera Raw team is sharing an early look of our new Reflection Removal feature, which removes reflections caused by plate glass surfaces from photos.
Note:
Check out the HelpX for more detailed usage information. For more technical information on the underlying technology, please refer to this Blog post.
Getting started with the Reflection Removal feature:
When using the slider, the key values to note are:
Please try the feature and share feedback in this community forum. It would help to include details like how you access Camera Raw (via Adobe Bridge or Photoshop), your computer system details, and as much information about what you like or do not like about the resulting photo quality. Our team will continually monitor this thread to track issues to improve the future experience.
When to use Reflection Removal
The feature is designed to deal with large-area reflections when shooting through windows. Many other types of reflections occur in nature and are captured in photographs, but this feature may not recognize and handle those. We plan to work on expanding the supported reflection types in the future.
Example use-cases for the feature include:
How best to use Reflection Removal
For best results, try the new feature following these suggestions:
Boris Ajdin: Product Manager, Emerging Products Group
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I would like to say that this tool made many of my photos from a train trip in Alaska from Fairbanks to Seward and a bus trip in Palm Springs looking at mid-century modern houses(including Frank Sinatra's). I look forward to more integration into Lightroom as the multi step dance to remove the reflection gets a little tiresome when processing over 100 photos.
For those'd that have problems with images that don't meet the criteria of this tool, such as reflections off of cars or water, I suggest looking into a tool that has been in use for over 50 yrs and works well with digital cameras, a circular polarization filter.
Marty
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Thanks Marty! Is there a place where we can view your work that uses reflection removal?
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Thanks. Nice shot!
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I did a different test today. I had a photo with a reflection caused by my grey grad filter. I used the reflection removal tool and it worked really well. Will need to remember this if it happens again in future. Normally I would delete the image.
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Reflections removal A+, however when I try to save the DNG and open in lightroom it still has the reflections, odd the preview doesn't show the reflections???
Also open in photoshop from lightroom makes it a tif and then the camera raw reflection removal doesn't work.
Thanks.
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Doesn't it work with NEF files?
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Sorry, the error was sitting in front of the computer.... it works!
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Hi,
Am an ex Adobe employee (10 years ago, when we switched to CC 🙂
I am using the Reflection removal very successfully but have noticed an issue where fringes are significantly increased and the Defringing is unable to correct it any longer. Admittedly, I am using the Reflection removal for images that it was not designed for (for example where only a case with glass appears in the picture and not where the whole picture is a pane of glass). Note in the enclosed file that Reflection removal has an effect on the reflection in the case but it modifies the frine on the edge of the case and in the lamp above. Nonetheless, I wanted to inform you of my observation. RAW file enclosed.
Thanks and best regards
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It seems that the attachment didn't make it. Could you attach the images to show what you are seeing?
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I thought I'd share a particularly successful use case of the reflection removal tool. I had thought that a photo I took at the Metropolitan Museum in New York was unusable, due to reflections and haze, and the reflective coating on this encaustic (colored wax) mummy portrait from Roman Egypt. But the tool saved the photo very effectively. The three attachments show the RAW file (denoise was used), the resulting image with reflections removed (not yet adjusted for color and lighting issues), and the image showing exactly what reflections were removed. As a great deal of my work involves my photographing museum displays (with no special lighting), this is a big deal for me.
I'm crossing my fingers that you rapidly evolve the tool to work with JPEGs and TIFFs, as there are times I don't have my professional camera with me, and have to use an iPhone to record a display - I have tons of 'unusable' reflection-ruined photos in those formats.
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Wow, that's a terrific example! We are working on JPEG/TIFF support. In the meantime, many iPhones support RAW as follows: Settings->Camera->Formats->ProRAW. Then when you are using the camera app, in the upper right you'll see an option to turn on RAW capture for your shot.
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Oh, I know the RAW setting on the iPhone very well. Unfortunately, my old iPhone 15's RAW setting produced some very poor results (possibly a software bug), so I'd try to shoot with both RAW and default settings, just to see which ones came out best. My newer iPhone 16 Pro Max has far better results, although it still struggles with gold metallics, removing all highlights (impossible to retrieve with LR or PS, because they just don't exist). For most official museum visits, I bring my Canon with me, and always set it to RAW, which still stuns me to see how much detail I can retrieve even from poorly lit displays.
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Hi,
I used this new feature to correct flare on many of my photos with excellent results.
Thanks
Michel Flohr
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I keep getting 'not currently compatible with this photo format' yet it is a .cr2 I am working on.
I am using a windows 11 machine and phtoshop 2025 and camera raw 17.1
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I get this message when I choose the option "edit with photoshop beta" on a raw file in Lightroom . The raw file then directly opens in Photoshop Beta. When I then open the raw filter and try to apply the reflection removal, it always says 'not currently compatible with this photo format' , although I work with Nikon raws (NEF). If I open the NEF file directly in Photoshop Beta, the raw filter first starts and I can use reflexion removal before I open the file in photoshop....
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Didn't work. Just get this every time...