Use a dedicated noise-reduction plugin (e.g., iZotope RX De-noise, Neat Video, Accusonus ERA Bundle) alongside Premiere Pro’s built-in tools to remove broadband noise and preserve dialogue clarity. This workflow covers preparation, plugin use, and final checks.
To make any plugin work correctly, placement in your effect chain is vital. Always follow this order:
The 70% Rule: Avoid 100% noise reduction. It sounds unnatural. Aim for 70–80% reduction to keep some "air" in the room, which feels more authentic to the viewer. 4. Dealing with "Artifacts"
The harsh truth: The native filter ruins detail. It makes eyes look waxy and fabric look like melted plastic. It also does not use GPU acceleration effectively, leading to painfully slow render times. For low-stakes web content? Maybe it works. For client work? You need a dedicated plugin.
Mistake B: The Watercolor Painting