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ISO Experiment
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From what I can tell there is a slight degradation but this shows up most noticeably in the background. This of course is a blurred out of focus element anyway. I would like to have the two prints side by side for a comparison.
The first image was the 200 ISO, the second the 800 ISO and the combined shows the 200 on the right. |
I used to be more concerned about excess noise at higher ISO settings but now I really don't anymore. I recently purchased a Sony F828 and at higher ISO settings it is noisy but this program called Noise Ninja really cleans things up well without losing quality in the image like filters in photoshop and others do. It's pretty fun to play around with too because of how clean it makes things. It takes a bit of playing around with to get used to it but once you get a good grip on how to use it, it becomes a great tool in your digital photo software arsenal.
The link for that program is http://www.picturecode.com |
Mike,
I can't say that I see any real problem with the images - at either ISO. It is interesting to see the extreme close-ups, since the snapdragons are well beyond actual size, and you wouldn't really ever need that for a human. |
Interesting demo. I can't see anything about the 800 ISO images that would be unpaintable. Time to go try this out with my own camera.
Also, thanks for choosing snapdragons for this demonstration. There is a large floral arrangement in the portrait I'm working on now and it has lots of snapdragons in soft, even lighting, much like you show here. I can use these photos as extra reference! (Of course, I'll need you to sign here, here, and here, to give me permission to violate your copyright. But then again, I'm hoping you'll never find out.) |
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Michele,
Take them, use them, abuse them. Here's another one if you please. I'd even send you a high res. if you want. Jeremiah, I've not heard of such a thing. No surprise there though. Chris, I was a little surprised at how well the 800 ISO held up. When you think that these are pretty radical closeups. I still think I'll draw the line at 400 ISO, but it's nice to know that I have the 800 in the bag in certain extreme circumstances. |
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I operate under the principle that anything worth doing is worth over doing. Kind of like the Rocky movies. I had to take this experiment to the extreme.
My camera has a range of ISO settings from 200 to 1600. I re-shot the above using the following ISO settings. The shutter speed was correspondingly selected by the camera in portrait mode, all at aperture 4.5: ISO 200 shutter speed 100 ISO 400 shutter speed 200 ISO 1250 shutter speed 800 ISO 1600 shutter speed 1000 The first is the full image shot at 1600 ISO. The next three are closeups 400, 1250, and 1600 ISO. |
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The first two images are crops from ISO 400 then 1600.
The next two are cropped further (from the bottom right corner of the previous two) from the ISO 400 then 1600. |
This seems remarkable to me. It suggests that from film to digital, in this regard, it's not apples and apples. Someone just said "Da."
I think it's something like this -- if you think of film as in pixels, it only has it's finite best. So this fixed pixel best, was put in combination with a fixed sensitivity (ISO), to create it's best fixed quality. Sombody stop me. Digitalia, on the other hand, at it's high end settings surpasses the fixed pixel best of film, and maybe by a long shot. If this is true, then you have to re-shuffle your matrix of the limitations of high end ISO settings. Or, and what is more likely, I am completely full of crap and yet, still walk around without a keeper. |
There is an amazingly small amount of difference between the closeups of 400 ISO and 1600 ISO shots. Who'd have thought!
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