...You might try increasing the powder charge a bit, within reason and the usual reloading caveats. In my .44s and .45s, as little as a half-grain change makes a big difference in the amount of smoke produced.
And other things, too!
These days, most of my shooting is in the evening on an indoor range. Years ago, when I shot mostly outdoors, I always used Elmer Keith's suggestion for a 44 target load - 8.5 grain of Unique. It was an acceptable load, but I was never really happy with it. I got more leading that I liked, and extreme spreads for 6 rounds could be considerable - sometimes around 70 FPS or a bit more.

In spite of this, the load shot reasonably well in most of my guns.
For some reason, I can't recall why, a couple years ago I switched to 9.0 grains. Just as Ron describes, the load burned cleaner, reports were more consistent, less leading, and accuracy improved.
Subsequent chrono tests showed the velocity increase to be more substantial than 0.5 grains would seem to indicate, which was curious, but consistency improved markedly.
The 9.0 grain load is just a bit hotter than I would like for target shooting, but since it works so well, and since I still have a lot of Unique, I have been using it.
If I were to run out and change powders, I would probably go to 231/HP38, just because it works so well in the other cartridges I use. If you are looking for something cleaner, Universal might be a good one. My experience with it presently is limited to .41 Magnum, but I would think it would be good in the .357 and 44, too.