How to STOP GRAINY photos
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ก.พ. 2023
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But remember: a grainy image is always better than a blurry image.
And Lightroom has gotten very good with cleaning noising images
ISO itself does not cause noise and also is not changing the sensitivity of a digital sensor. For most modern cameras it's just applying digital gain to the signal coming from the sensor.
That’s objectively not true where did you get any of this information. In the words of Luke Skywalker “amazing everything you just said was wrong.”
@@ShodyLoko Absence of light causes noise, not the ISO setting.
@@TechnoBabble that’s splitting hairs.. though isn’t it? You can stop down to f22 throw an ND filter on a nice bright sunny day and bump iso up to 6400 and get grainy photos. ISO is essentially how the camera interprets the lighting of the scene boost the underlying brightness of the image it processes.
@@ShodyLoko stopping down the aperture and using an ND would be lowering the amount of light, hence more noise. It has nothing to do with the ISO setting itself.
This idea that ISO causes noise is what leads to beginners underexposing all of their lower light images because they think shooting at a lower ISO will give them less noise even though they need to raise the exposure in post.
Great video and I like the lights!
Option 4: good ai denoiser
Ive noticed that even with high iso, as long as the shutter speed is realtively high and the exposure is good there wont be very much noise compared to a lower iso, slower shutter speed, and worse exposure. Just my experience using a D800 in low light
Have to admit, and I’m dating myself here, I used to love the grain on my 35mm film hand printed photos
Yes let's do it, Event Photography on F1. 2 50mm at F1.2
Worked! Thanks
Thanks so much I just subscribed and liked ❤you made my day. Thanks for the help
sir u didn't explain the other complication of slow shutter speed (subject motion blur), and the other effect of large aperture (shallow DOF)
Because I'm limited to 60sec and the video isn't about either of the subjects you highlighted.
Great Bro
I am getting grainy photos with indoor lighting. Is this an issue?
I been looking for an answer to this for a while thank you
Or lower your iso? 🤷
DxO PureRaw 3 or Topaz Denoise?
Yep, post processing works too
Majority of photographers won't afford/want to pay for that. Besides, these videos are also here to help beginners and amateurs, many of which don't even have Lightroom.
Always aim to get the best possible picture in camera to reduce downstream progressing (this now aimed at beginners and amateurs as more advanced users and professionals will post prices regardless)
Low shutter speed is more about the subject not moving than the camera not moving (especially if your camera has good ibis)