Firstly, I'm not a Topaz ambassador and Topaz haven't asked me to do this, this is just me, showing you, how good this software really is, I've had quite a few people ask me how I'm getting on with Topaz Photo Ai, and I've also recommended it to many people at work, customers and colleagues. So I thought it would be a good idea to show you, using real life examples, all shot on my Canon EOS R7 + Canon RF100-400mm F/5.6-8.0 IS USM all at either high ISO's, cropped or with motion blur, or maybe all 3!
So far Topaz has more than paid for itself for me, it's made so many images useable that I would have ordinarily deleted, I've also found it can improve older shots taken on previous cameras.
Something else added in Topaz Photo Ai is Face Restoration, so I've included one of my parents wedding photo's (a scanned 35mm slide) and put that through Topaz, so you can see what it can do with portraits, the results are incredible.
Below are some screenshots from my Mac with the final processed image on there right, I hope you find these useful, and if you do, why not head over to Topaz's website and try the trial version on your own images.
The Mac screenshot image shows the original image on the left the preview pane, the adjusted image next to it on the right, and if you look in the top right hand corner you will see a box around the area that displays in the preview panes.
All these tests were done on an Apple MacBook Air M1 (2020) 8Gb/256Gb using Topaz Photo Ai V1.1.0.


Exposure: 1/800 sec | f/8.0 | ISO 6400


Exposure: 1/320 sec | f/8.0 | ISO 12800


Exposure: 1/200 sec | f/8.0 | ISO 12800


Exposure: 1/400 sec | f/8.0 | ISO 12800


Exposure: 1/400 sec | f/8.0 | ISO 12800





Exposure: 1/400 sec | f/8.0 | ISO 4000


Exposure: 1/640 sec | f/8.0 | ISO 400


Exposure: 1/400 sec | f/8.0 | ISO 5000


Exposure: 1/400 sec | f/8.0 | ISO 12800


Picture taken in 1970 | 35mm Slide Film | Scanned with Epson V600