In my case, I honestly don't recall. I often batch up shots greater than ISO 800 and run a pass of Neat Image.Those of you showing an ISO of 1600 - you ARE running the photos thru Noiseware, aren't you? Or are you going to tell me that when you use a dSLR and shoot at ISO 1600 you don't get noise?
Yes. I used the Canon 24-70 f/2.8 for the shorter shots on the Canon 70-200 f/2.8 IS lens for the longer shots. I also brought a Canon 17-40mm f/4.0 lens and a 50mm f/1.8 lens on the trip. I didn't use either of those very much.Mark a question..is that a 70-200 IS f2.8 lens you are using for those with a longer focal length?
Those of you showing an ISO of 1600 - you ARE running the photos thru Noiseware, aren't you? Or are you going to tell me that when you use a dSLR and shoot at ISO 1600 you don't get noise? Those photos are perfect!
Spectromagic. Taken with Canon 10D. EXIF not present. I can go look it up if anyone is dying to know.
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They likely did some NR, but for your reference, I did some test shots with my S2 and K100D. The 1600 on the DSLR is much cleaner than the 400 on the S2. Actually, the 3200 was pretty much the same as the 400 on the S2. I didn't test this level, but I would guess that the 1600 on the DSLR is similar to the 200 on the S2.
Kevin
Italy, just before Illuminations
Flash used: No
Focal length: 40.3mm (35mm equivalent: 1489mm)
CCD width: 0.97mm
Exposure time: 0.800 s
Aperture: f/3.5
Whitebalance: Auto
Metering Mode: center weight
American Adventure, just before Illuminations
Flash used: No
Focal length: 16.8mm (35mm equivalent: 621mm)
CCD width: 0.97mm
Exposure time: 1.000 s
Aperture: f/3.5
Whitebalance: Auto
Metering Mode: center weight
Festival of the Lion King.
Flash used: Yes (manual)
Focal length: 48.6mm (35mm equivalent: 1796mm)
Exposure time: 0.017 s (1/60)
Aperture: f/3.5
Whitebalance: Auto
Metering Mode: center weight
Those of you showing an ISO of 1600 - you ARE running the photos thru Noiseware, aren't you? Or are you going to tell me that when you use a dSLR and shoot at ISO 1600 you don't get noise? Those photos are perfect!
I am betting that you just copied the 35mm equiv from some program, but you might want to check those b/c the entire range of the S3 in 35mm equiv is 36 - 432mm. Having a shot like that at 1796mm would be completly amazing as it would require a 4X converter. If I am wrong, please let me know.
Kevin
.... I don't think he gets noise. In fact, I think it's called quiet on his system.
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Incidentally, if you've ever wondered why your camera has an obsurdly fast maximum shutter speed (1/2000, 1/4000, or even 1/8000), it's generally not used because you need to eliminate motion blur on bullets whizzing past you. It's because you sometimes need that to make everything else fit on the scales I posted. On a bright sunny day, you may have so much light that you use ISO 100 on your camera. You may be taking a portrait on want really shallow DOF, so you use f/2.8. That might force you to use a 1/4000s shutter speed just to keep from overexposing. Another alternative is to put a neutral density filter (like sunglasses for your camera) on your lens.
to be honest, I like the first one better. I am not a serious pixel peeper, and the noise wear stuff tends to make the images softer in my opinion.Oh yeah, in the Spectro warmup shot above, the first shot is "as shot", the second is after Noiseware had its way with it.