Lena smiled. Then she added a tiny EQ boost at 120 Hz to bring back the low-end warmth of his chest voice.
She lowered the reduction dial—not to 100% (which would destroy the voice), but to 65%. noise reduction plugin premiere pro
Lena tried Premiere Pro’s built-in denoiser. It helped, but it made Arthur sound like he was talking from inside a pillow. The warmth of his voice vanished, replaced by a watery, phasey echo. Lena smiled
Frustrated, she searched online and found a recommendation for (a simple, intelligent noise reduction plugin). Skeptical, she downloaded the trial. replaced by a watery
She applied it to the clip, hit play—nothing. The hum was still there. Then she realized her mistake: she hadn’t trained the plugin.