Re: High ISO noise expectations

2009-08-14 Thread Luiz Felipe
The 330 ftz offers the funcion too - don't know if it would work with 
the K20d. Works good with the Ds.


About the noise, I don't think it's a bad performance. Just the price to 
pay for the high speed attained. No, I don't think these samples are 
flawed. Back in the film days (last month, for me) the high ISO road 
meant a second camera, lotsa grain, and often dedicated darkroom (BW).


Larry, I believe you get less noise from a full frame, 12mp camera that 
costs a lot more than the K20d... but the performance you'd get for the 
spent dollar probably wouldn't be so interesting.


lf

Bruce Walker escreveu:

Larry Colen wrote:

I'm still wrestling with my K20D in high ISO. I'm often severely
disappointed with the noise level. Last night, I posted these shots to
facebook: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157622030236980/

I just got a note from a friend of a friend about them:
Eric's friend Joe here. Hey, saw the pics you posted, very nice! The
lighting was really nice, was it just natural light or fill-flash? It
was very nice lighting, but I wondered if if was off-camera
flash. Maybe high ISO, but they didn't look noisy. Just wanted to say
nice pics!

So, it's interesting that a Canon user thinks that my ISO 1600-3200
shots are done with a flash because they aren't very noisy.
Then again, I'm not posting the ones that look like crap.


I think you are being overly picky, actually. The noise level in those 
shots is not bad at all, and is about what I would expect to get.


The noise artifacts you are seeing in your shots could be very easily 
improved by post-processing with a noise-reduction plugin. I like and 
use Imagenomic Noiseware which can be plugged-in to Lightroom, Photoshop 
(including Elements) and Aperture (I believe).  The secret to using the 
NR plugins is to use them very sparingly or they kill detail.  I set 
Noiseware to something like 0-10% for highlights, 20-30% for mids and 
80-100% for shadows. Shadow and black areas is usually where noise is 
most evident and detail is the least important.


I'd be willing to bet that you could even get pretty good results with 
the built-in NR in Adobe Camera Raw, at least the implementation in CS4. 
 I've been using that lately, without PP with Noiseware, and I get good 
results, although I'm not generally straying above ISO 1600.




I'm finding that manual focus is working a lot better for me than
autofocus in low light dance photography, but that sometimes I'll just
totally blow the focus. I think that it is because I'm using the red
focus alerts as an aid, and sometimes they get confused.


Do you have a 360FGZ or 540FGZ?  Try attaching the flash and setting it 
to do AF focus-assist *only* (ie no flash).


-bmw

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High ISO noise expectations

2009-08-13 Thread Larry Colen
I'm still wrestling with my K20D in high ISO. I'm often severely
disappointed with the noise level. Last night, I posted these shots to
facebook: 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157622030236980/

I just got a note from a friend of a friend about them:
Eric's friend Joe here. Hey, saw the pics you posted, very nice! The
lighting was really nice, was it just natural light or fill-flash? It
was very nice lighting, but I wondered if if was off-camera
flash. Maybe high ISO, but they didn't look noisy. Just wanted to say
nice pics!

So, it's interesting that a Canon user thinks that my ISO 1600-3200
shots are done with a flash because they aren't very noisy.
Then again, I'm not posting the ones that look like crap.

I'm finding that manual focus is working a lot better for me than
autofocus in low light dance photography, but that sometimes I'll just
totally blow the focus. I think that it is because I'm using the red
focus alerts as an aid, and sometimes they get confused.

-- 
The first step is learning to take great photos, 
the second step is learning to throw away ones that are merely good.
Larry Colen l...@red4est.comhttp://www.red4est.com/lrc


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Re: High ISO noise expectations

2009-08-13 Thread Miserere
2009/8/13 Larry Colen l...@red4est.com:

 I'm finding that manual focus is working a lot better for me than
 autofocus in low light dance photography.

Larry, how do you manage to get steady photos while you dance?

The focus assist really IS like a real assistant; i.e., you can
sometimes let it do your work for you, but if you want it done right,
you have to do it yourself.

As for the pics, I can't tell much because the sizes are quite small
on your Flickr page, but I would be happy to be getting that quality
at ISO3200. This one, for example:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/3818423996/in/set-72157622030236980/

looks very clean.

High ISO looks crap when you pixel peep, there is no way around that,
but photographs are either viewed small on the internet or are printed
on 8x12 at the largest (in general). In both cases your high ISO shots
look good. Although I haven't seen an 8x12 print of the above photo,
I'd be willing to bet it *will* look good.

Cheers,


 --M.


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Re: High ISO noise expectations

2009-08-13 Thread P. J. Alling
The look very nice, when I was shooting 1600 ASA film I'd have killed 
for such clean results, and I like grain.  The fact is we've become spoiled.


Larry Colen wrote:

I'm still wrestling with my K20D in high ISO. I'm often severely
disappointed with the noise level. Last night, I posted these shots to
facebook: 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157622030236980/


I just got a note from a friend of a friend about them:
Eric's friend Joe here. Hey, saw the pics you posted, very nice! The
lighting was really nice, was it just natural light or fill-flash? It
was very nice lighting, but I wondered if if was off-camera
flash. Maybe high ISO, but they didn't look noisy. Just wanted to say
nice pics!

So, it's interesting that a Canon user thinks that my ISO 1600-3200
shots are done with a flash because they aren't very noisy.
Then again, I'm not posting the ones that look like crap.

I'm finding that manual focus is working a lot better for me than
autofocus in low light dance photography, but that sometimes I'll just
totally blow the focus. I think that it is because I'm using the red
focus alerts as an aid, and sometimes they get confused.

  



--


The free man owns himself. He can damage himself with either eating or 
drinking; he can ruin himself with gambling. If he does he is certainly a damn 
fool, and he might possibly be a damned soul; but if he may not, he is not a 
free man any more than a dog.

--G. K. Chesterton


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Re: High ISO noise expectations

2009-08-13 Thread Larry Colen
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 02:18:04PM -0400, Miserere wrote:
 2009/8/13 Larry Colen l...@red4est.com:
 
  I'm finding that manual focus is working a lot better for me than
  autofocus in low light dance photography.
 
 Larry, how do you manage to get steady photos while you dance?

I'm not shooting while I'm dancing. Well, not usually.

I brace myself, and prefer to use a monopod.

 
 The focus assist really IS like a real assistant; i.e., you can
 sometimes let it do your work for you, but if you want it done right,
 you have to do it yourself.

I wish I could set things up so that it's in manual focus, but I can
set a button to autofocus, and then release the motor so I can fine
tune the focus by hand. I suppose I can get used to using the focus
mode switch by the lens.

Even with the katzeye, it's tough in low light manually. I need to
train myself that when the camera says it has focus lock, I have to
make sure that it is locking on the right thing.

 
 As for the pics, I can't tell much because the sizes are quite small
 on your Flickr page, but I would be happy to be getting that quality

That set was processed for facebook, so the smaller size. I just
posted those on flickr so Joe could see the EXIF data.

 at ISO3200. This one, for example:
 
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/3818423996/in/set-72157622030236980/
 
 looks very clean.

Thanks.

 
 High ISO looks crap when you pixel peep, there is no way around that,

But sometimes it looks a lot worse than others.

 but photographs are either viewed small on the internet or are printed
 on 8x12 at the largest (in general). In both cases your high ISO shots
 look good. Although I haven't seen an 8x12 print of the above photo,
 I'd be willing to bet it *will* look good.
 
 Cheers,
 
 
  --M.
 
 
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 http://www.EnticingTheLight.com
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The first step is learning to take great photos, 
the second step is learning to throw away ones that are merely good.
Larry Colen l...@red4est.comhttp://www.red4est.com/lrc


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Re: High ISO noise expectations

2009-08-13 Thread Rick Womer

http://photo.net/photos/RickW


--- On Thu, 8/13/09, Larry Colen l...@red4est.com wrote:


 I wish I could set things up so that it's in manual focus,
 but I can
 set a button to autofocus, and then release the motor so I
 can fine
 tune the focus by hand. I suppose I can get used to using
 the focus
 mode switch by the lens.

What lens are you using?  The Pentax lenses for the past few years have allowed 
manual touch-up of focus without releasing anything.

 
 Even with the katzeye, it's tough in low light manually. I
 need to
 train myself that when the camera says it has focus lock, I
 have to
 make sure that it is locking on the right thing.

The AF sensors are =much= larger than the little red squares.  The central one, 
for example, is the size of the circle in the center of the finder.

Rick


  

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Re: High ISO noise expectations

2009-08-13 Thread AlunFoto
2009/8/13 Larry Colen l...@red4est.com:

 I brace myself, and prefer to use a monopod.

Three legged dancing... :-)

First time I really gave high ISO a try was this January, when I went
North to photograph eagles.

On one day I spent close to 3 hours snapping away at ISO 3200 and 1600
at a cooperative goshawk. I thought they looked awful, until a guy
with a Nikon D3x back at the cottage commented that when ever he saw
the results from the Pentaxes (his buddy had a K10D) he sometimes
wondered if the high-end Nikons were worth the money... :-)

Personally I found the high-ISO noise of the K20D to be much easier to
deal with than the same from K10D. Of course there's room for
improvement, but I think the results from K20D is nothing to be
ashamed of. When writing deal with, I mean removing noise in PP. I
use NoiseNinja plugin for PS and it does a very fine job most of the
time.

Jostein


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Re: High ISO noise expectations

2009-08-13 Thread Larry Colen
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 12:57:22PM -0700, Rick Womer wrote:
 --- On Thu, 8/13/09, Larry Colen l...@red4est.com wrote:
 
  tune the focus by hand. I suppose I can get used to using
  the focus
  mode switch by the lens.
 
 What lens are you using?  The Pentax lenses for the past few years have 
 allowed manual touch-up of focus without releasing anything.

For low light, FA31/1.8 and FA50/1.4.

  have to
  make sure that it is locking on the right thing.
 
 The AF sensors are =much= larger than the little red squares.  The central 
 one, for example, is the size of the circle in the center of the finder.

That would explain a bit.

-- 
The first step is learning to take great photos, 
the second step is learning to throw away ones that are merely good.
Larry Colen l...@red4est.comhttp://www.red4est.com/lrc


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Re: High ISO noise expectations

2009-08-13 Thread Bruce Walker

Larry Colen wrote:

I'm still wrestling with my K20D in high ISO. I'm often severely
disappointed with the noise level. Last night, I posted these shots to
facebook: 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157622030236980/


I just got a note from a friend of a friend about them:
Eric's friend Joe here. Hey, saw the pics you posted, very nice! The
lighting was really nice, was it just natural light or fill-flash? It
was very nice lighting, but I wondered if if was off-camera
flash. Maybe high ISO, but they didn't look noisy. Just wanted to say
nice pics!

So, it's interesting that a Canon user thinks that my ISO 1600-3200
shots are done with a flash because they aren't very noisy.
Then again, I'm not posting the ones that look like crap.


I think you are being overly picky, actually. The noise level in those 
shots is not bad at all, and is about what I would expect to get.


The noise artifacts you are seeing in your shots could be very easily 
improved by post-processing with a noise-reduction plugin. I like and 
use Imagenomic Noiseware which can be plugged-in to Lightroom, Photoshop 
(including Elements) and Aperture (I believe).  The secret to using the 
NR plugins is to use them very sparingly or they kill detail.  I set 
Noiseware to something like 0-10% for highlights, 20-30% for mids and 
80-100% for shadows. Shadow and black areas is usually where noise is 
most evident and detail is the least important.


I'd be willing to bet that you could even get pretty good results with 
the built-in NR in Adobe Camera Raw, at least the implementation in CS4. 
 I've been using that lately, without PP with Noiseware, and I get good 
results, although I'm not generally straying above ISO 1600.




I'm finding that manual focus is working a lot better for me than
autofocus in low light dance photography, but that sometimes I'll just
totally blow the focus. I think that it is because I'm using the red
focus alerts as an aid, and sometimes they get confused.


Do you have a 360FGZ or 540FGZ?  Try attaching the flash and setting it 
to do AF focus-assist *only* (ie no flash).


-bmw

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