06-16-2020, 07:51 PM
(06-16-2020, 06:50 PM)thxbb12 Wrote: Yes, I do.
Sometimes you may have a large difference in brightness between say the foreground and the sky.
A solution is to use a tripod and shoot multiple shots at different exposures and merge them.
Another solution is to use a graduated filter, but it only works if you the 2 areas are perfectly separated, e.g. with a line.
A last solution is to take a single shot and post-process. Not perfect, but you can get descent results if the sensor doesn't introduce too much noise after post-processing (typically pulling dark areas).
That's where most Canon sensors suck.
Well said, however newer Canon sensors seem to have solved the issue with 80D 5D4 90D and EOSR it's not a problem with my EOSRP it still is.
My 7D2 has built in HDR that works quite well and at 10fps it is usable handheld the result is very acceptable. But I agree a better sensor is the way to go.
Sensor performance on paper isn't everything I would still prefer my EOSRP over an A7ii despite A7ii sensor superiority in reviews