
These days, many tools utilize advanced technologies collectively known as AI or artificial intelligence. These technologies can also be used to create “photographs,” paintings, or other creations. I prefer to distinguish between using these technologies to create or edit in post-processing. Creation is for the artists, who may use various tools to edit and modify their creations. These tools may range from a simple brush in Photoshop to advanced noise reduction or sharpening with AI.
Your views may differ from mine and although I stated them up front, I do not intend to argue those points. Instead, I will share my experiences with a tool in this domain, Aiarty Image Enhancer.
Some Images Need Improvement
After receiving a review license from Aiarty, I tried it on different frames in my collection. The results were less than impressive as I did not see much improvement. I wrote to their team and expressed my concern and the reply was “Your images are already sharp.”
Then it sank in a little better. This was a piece of software to correct some unexpected problems. The image may be a little out of focus, slightly blurry, too noisy, and maybe not large enough. Then I focused on thousands of photographs I scanned, prints, slides, or negatives.
Aiarty Image Enhancer
Aiarty Image Enhancer is very simple to use, maybe a little too simple in some ways. You can find extensive instructions on their guide page for this product. There are options for selecting AI models and then it does its thing. In addition to model selection, there are a couple of other checkboxes to activate special functions. One that may be of particular interest to users with scanned photographs is the Face Restoration function. Essentially it recreates the face using the broad features in the original photograph. Here is a summary of the models on their website and when to choose them.
Click on the images to see them larger, uncropped, and read their titles.


At the bottom of the UI is the container area to hold the images to be processed. Above that is the viewing area, which gets split into before/after sections, as you can see above. Alternatively, you can display before and after versions side-by-side. On the right are the model selections and a couple of checkboxes that can be activated. The slider in the middle lets you compare the before-and-after views of the image.
Workflow
The workflow starts by selecting images in your collection and then dropping them into the container. It does not recognize PSD format files, so they need to be exported to one of the supported file formats before loading them to Aiarty: TIFF, JPEG, JPG, or PNG. I have not tried other image formats.
It can be configured to start working on the images as they are dropped into the container area. Depending on the image size and the additional functions selected, it quickly processes them for viewing. Either one at a time or by selecting more than one, exporting the processed images finalizes the results. It can save images in JPEG or PNG formats, the latter in 16-bit. The export folder can also be selected in the process configuration.
What Is It Good For?
As mentioned before I have not noticed any appreciable benefit for my standard digital images. So, don’t get your hopes up! But, if you have some slightly blurry photos or have some with motion blur, Aiarty can help reduce them. It has more visible benefits for old scanned photographs, especially those scanned from prints. One of those features is Face Restoration which produces artificially good results for the faces, even with a slight hint of color. Look at a few sample pictures processed in Aiarty Image Enhancer and see if you agree with the artificially good description for the Face Restoration feature. Of course, some may like this result; to each her/his own.



If you have a group photograph, face restoration may be a welcome feature as it can enhance all the faces. Here is one I processed using that, move the slider to see the difference. You will also notice the slightly sharper presentation on the clothing, ties, and other edges. For some reason, unlike the previous examples, the skin colors became cooler after the enhancement.


Another important feature of the Aiarty Image Enhancer is upsizing the images. It can enlarge them up to 8x the original size. If you have small old photographs scanned rather small, you can easily enlarge them up to 8 times their original size or 8K dimensions. The maximum enlargement is 32K, meaning the long dimension becomes 32,000 pixels. Of course, you can also enlarge your recent digital captures if necessary. Here are some samples. A print scanned at 100 dpi, enhanced in Aiarty, and then enlarged 4 times the original. This is when I wish there were a way to adjust the final impact. Of course, you can try a different model and see if that produces less aggressive results.



Conclusion and Wishes
Aiarty Image Enhancer is reasonably priced, currently $99 for a lifetime copy, and quite capable for certain tasks. Even when I used full-size, high-resolution TIFF files as input, processing was quick. You can experiment with different models, but it may be a better idea to read about them in their guide. Trying them one at a time has no penalty, of course, and you may gain some more insight if you have the patience.
Although I find the results quite good, I wish there was a way to lower their impact on the images. This is especially true in Face Reconstruction with puzzling color casts, sometimes warmer sometimes cooler than the original. Some adjustments may be too strong for some tastes, like mine. But overall, Aiarty Image Enhancer is an easy-to-use tool for adding more structure to some images.
jackie
Do I see some familiar faces in these photos?
A. Cemal Ekin
Yes, you do, Jackie, in all people’s photos.
Cemal
Haluk Atamal
This has been a very useful article for me, Cemal. Thanks for sharing your experience.
At first everything reminded me of the old times when photographers took their time to retouch the faces – carefully pencil out irregularities on the large negatives, most of the time overdone. Then on a second thought, I decided it could be a very useful tool for restoring old documentary memories.
To be frank, the first impression was due to your sharing of the young boy (you?). It is outright bad to my taste. Then I carefully examined the group photo. Apart from the cooling of the skin colours, it is really working wonderfully.
Here of course we are not talking about photographic art anymore; what we need is better quality documents from the past. I remember Atatürk’s “nutuk” improved through digital sound processing; nobody would argue the usefulness of such improvements.
I have literally thousands of old negative scans from my film days and a lot of them need an IAArty touch.
The price is OK and it might be a good idea to buy one life-time license before they wake up and revert to subscription model.
I will definitely try your link. Do they send a proper invoice, Cemal? I have to see if the VAT will be included for orders from Turkey.
Take care and best regards,
Haluk
A. Cemal Ekin
Yes, Haluk, these are from my album. I even have the camera in the same camera case I hold in my hand in the first photo. I did not want to put other people’s photos in case they did not like the idea. The software is quite capable and the price seemed reasonable to me. I am glad to hear that you have already bought a copy. You will enjoy seeing the old photos rising!
Take care,
Cemal
Aleks
Thanks for sharing this information, Cemal!
I too have recently tested this app and didn’t notice any visible improvement in photo quality either. The grain on the digitised negatives has reduced a bit. Nothing else. I tried to use the ‘face recovery’ option, but I didn’t have the patience to wait until the end of processing.Because the face recovery took a very long time. Considering your good result I will try to do face restoration again.
This developer has another very good programme for fast automatic background removal from photos ‘Aiarty Image Matting’. Their website is now giving everyone a free licence for this program. I wrote a review of it on my website. You can test it and write your opinion for us
A. Cemal Ekin
Thanks for stopping by, Aleks. Even on large TIFF files, face restoration was rather quick, say a minute maybe even less. I wonder if earlier versions were slower. I got these results easily and quickly. My main wish was, and is, to have a little more control over the extent of the restoration to make it a little less artificial. But, others may like that very clear face generated by Aiarty. The free demo may give you a chance to try it.
Take care,
Cemal
Aleks
Thank you, Cemal. Is it possible that I have a weak video card or processor? But now I’ll try it again. I often scan negatives and old photos. Some old photos are very damaged by time and I would like to have a tool to restore them. And of course I would like to control this process to keep the portrait resemblance.
A. Cemal Ekin
You may be right on the video card engine. It does use that.
Cemal
Michael Di Stefano
Howdy Cemal, how would you compare this program vs. Topaz Denoise AI and sharpen AI?
A. Cemal Ekin
Hi Mike. I have no experience with Topaz products. This does some things well but has very little if any effect on regular digital images. I have not tried doubling the size of my RAW files. Take care,
Cemal
Paul White
Cemal
I have been using Topaz AI for a while because I have hand tremors and have trouble holding the camera steady. I have had some fantastic results. I don’t have any scanned items to try.
I am going to look into this program and try it
Thanks,
Paul
A. Cemal Ekin
Hi Paul, it may be interesting to find out how it fixes problems coming from shaky hands. I tried it on really shaky shots at slow shutter speeds without much luck. But there is a free trial. Give it a shot. Take care,
Cemal