Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
Hi All
just a quick one. Just been told that for run of the mill photo's (ok I know you lot dont take run of the mill stuff). To set the ISO on my camera at 800? Reason being 100/200 adds to much contrast? and above 800 to much grain/noise? What do you reckon
rob
Re: Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
Hi Rob,
My personal philosophy is to use as low a standard ISO as is needed (100 for Canon). If I need more then I have no hesitation in going higher (eg I won't risk camera shake) but (eg) general day-to-day shooting it would be set to 100.
Re: Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
That advice probably depends on what you mean by gentlemen of the 'press'. I know that photographers for local papers who come around to photograph 100th birthdays or a newly refurbished scout hut, etc, are mostly excellent photographers who vary all their camera settings to suit each scene.
However, the situation would be different for the paparazzi who might get one quick shot of a celebrity behaving badly and don't have time to make any adjustments. So using ISO 800 would give you the option of being ready for almost any light level.
I sometimes do the same with flying birds when it is a case of 'look at that' and snap.
Re: Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Geoff F
That advice probably depends on what you mean by gentlemen of the 'press'. I know that photographers for local papers who come around to photograph 100th birthdays or a newly refurbished scout hut, etc, are mostly excellent photographers who vary all their camera settings to suit each scene.
However, the situation would be different for the paparazzi who might get one quick shot of a celebrity behaving badly and don't have time to make any adjustments. So using ISO 800 would give you the option of being ready for almost any light level.
I sometimes do the same with flying birds when it is a case of 'look at that' and snap.
Which is better; To under expose by two ev to achieve a reasonble speed, or bump the iso up? I don't know I tried the under expose bit and still got a lot of noise.
Re: Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
With modern digital cameras and a reasonable lens, I would always (well nearly always) increase ISO to get the correct shutter speed, or aperture, than excessively underexpose.
With some subjects, like a bird against the sky for example, you have to overexpose a dark bird and underexpose a white one unless you know that your settings are correct for your main subject.
Usually my chief cause of total failures is camera shake due to insufficient shutter speed for hand holding, and sometimes not allowing for subject movement when using a tripod.
Total failures due solely to high ISO isn't common for me; and in most cases something can be saved. Which, I think, is what the press photographer meant.
But if you have a static subject, particularly with a tripod, and have time to think things through, use as low an ISO as possible.
Re: Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
Yes but I don't normally photograph birds, and it was a particularly dull day and I had to test my lens and use AI servo for the first time.
I normally use 200 iso and since 800 I'm told excessively increases noise, and I can bump up exposure because I always shoot raw, I thought underexpose was possibly best.
But it is all swings and roundabouts, I don't know if it is better and probably somebody here has tried both and knows.
This is superfluous but I'm exposed 2 ev under for the swans and they didn't move as much as this fella.
http://backup.cambridgeincolour.com/...ra_hfsmall.jpg
Most the noise has been removed.
Re: Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
A rule of thumb I was taught and still see being applied (keep in mind that everybody's "thumb" is different."
If you under expose a stop or so, your highlights are in the picture and can be brought out later in the "darkroom." Very little, if anything else, is lost, generally.
If you over expose, you highlights can blow out and you cannot get them back, as they become just blotches of light, without detail.
I generally under expose by about 2/3 to a full stop outdoors. Of course, I'm shooting in a very bright, desert sunny locale. If up in the forrests, I will under expose only 1/3 stop, unless I'm trying to get sunlight shafts in the picture, when I under expose a bit more. If there are no highlights to capture, I might actually go to +1/3 ev. That is my camera and my eye and my preferance. The way YOU shoud run your camera is dependant on YOUR eye and YOUR camera.
Most of today's cameras and films will not throw noticable grain and noise on a full frame photograph. If you are cropping to retain only a tiny protion of the photograph, then it can become a major problem.
Pops
Re: Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
Cheers, I think I might get it some day with luck. I now generally underexpose if something is white, like a swan, or water especially a waterfall because of sparkling bits, and overexpose for mainly black subjects if it is important to get some detail.
If I get both together I get confused. lol
Re: Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
arith
Which is better; To under expose by two ev to achieve a reasonble speed, or bump the iso up? I don't know I tried the under expose bit and still got a lot of noise.
If you under-expose by 2 stops then your throwing away a full 3/4 of the information that you could have captured :(
Re: Too much contrast at low ISO speeds?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
PopsPhotos
If you under expose a stop or so, your highlights are in the picture and can be brought out later in the "darkroom." Very little, if anything else, is lost, generally.
If you over expose, you highlights can blow out and you cannot get them back, as they become just blotches of light, without detail.
With Digital there's a bit of "theory -v- practice" in this area. Because sensors are (for all intents and purposes) linear, if you halve the light hitting the sensor (by underexposing - from a "perfect exposure" by 1 stop) then you reduce the maximum number of levels from 4096 to 2048 (for a 12 bit A/D conversion).
1 Stop is hardly noticeable to the naked eye, and in post processing everything gets "rearranged". In a relatively "normal" scene (ie no backlighting, no specular highlights, and largely only reflected light) this one stop correction doesn't cause any issues because the sensor is capturing around 12 stops and we're only using around 6 (max) with a normal displayed (4 printed) image having to compensate for the -1EV EC takes you one stop closer to the noise floor, but your still so far above it anyway that it doesn't make a lot of difference.
Where it can bite you in the bum though is when you need the full dynamic range of the sensor because your shootig into the light, and need to recover shadow detail in the foreground; in these situations under-exposing can visably add more noise.
So - one might think that it's a good idea not to under-expose when shooting into the light (eg sunset shots), but in practice, because the sensor can get a little non-linear when pushed to the limits, you can often end up losing a bit of highlight detail, so it becomes a choice between risking highlight detail (even though the image isn't technically over-exposed), or risking shadow noise.
The ideal answer for these situations is to use a GND filter, and under-expose slightly :)
Hopefully not too much information!