10-26-2010, 08:48 PM
yes - seems to look good, and it's nice to have such jpegs - but do the whites seem to be clipped and the blacks crushed?
[quote name='wim' timestamp='1288123338' post='3800']
Just make sure you expose correctly. You get hit quite hard when you don't (but then, that is generally true for high iso shooting, with any dslr)..
Kind regards, Wim
[/quote]
hmmm . . . just one thing, and it might be me or the way i work, but i find i can get a very acceptable picture out 2 stops or even more underexposed at iso800 (so i suppose effectively correctly exposed iso3200 or more) by using auto-iso200-800 in camera and then doing the amplification in the computer, in my case with C1, so long as there is some contrast in the picture - but maybe this is a quirk of my gear - and i must say it's generally a mistake in my settings in the heat of the shooting as i really really like iso200
and although there has been a small difference of opinion with a nr specialist that what i'm about to say is nonsense (well what's new in that you say), but for me the lens used makes a big difference - so that nice high quality lenses (you know which) return much better pictures in difficult situations (so much easier to do nr on with fewer losses) than a lesser lens on the same shot
[quote name='wim' timestamp='1288123338' post='3800']
Just make sure you expose correctly. You get hit quite hard when you don't (but then, that is generally true for high iso shooting, with any dslr)..
Kind regards, Wim
[/quote]
hmmm . . . just one thing, and it might be me or the way i work, but i find i can get a very acceptable picture out 2 stops or even more underexposed at iso800 (so i suppose effectively correctly exposed iso3200 or more) by using auto-iso200-800 in camera and then doing the amplification in the computer, in my case with C1, so long as there is some contrast in the picture - but maybe this is a quirk of my gear - and i must say it's generally a mistake in my settings in the heat of the shooting as i really really like iso200
and although there has been a small difference of opinion with a nr specialist that what i'm about to say is nonsense (well what's new in that you say), but for me the lens used makes a big difference - so that nice high quality lenses (you know which) return much better pictures in difficult situations (so much easier to do nr on with fewer losses) than a lesser lens on the same shot