Hi Al,
I have read that in some cases low ISO is used. Can i know what is the difference taking a picture with high and low ISO? Assuming that both settings will not get under or over exposed with the respective shutter speed set.
Please help to advice. Thanks.
High ISO, lots of noise in the picture. Imagine those photos taken in the 60s or earlier...
Low ISO, not a lot of noise in the picture.
Some people call noise the graininess in the photo. It's the same.
So what is desired? Depends on the photographer. Sometimes there is no choice but to use high ISO because of lighting issues, not fast enough shutter speed, .. .etc. Some times people use high ISO because their cameras are good enough that the noise level is acceptable or they really want the grains in their photos for some artistic reasons.
But generally, most photographers aim for low ISO.
Hi Al,
Can i know what is the difference taking a picture with high and low ISO?
High ISO, lots of noise in the picture. Imagine those photos taken in the 60s or earlier...
Low ISO, not a lot of noise in the picture.
Some people call noise the graininess in the photo. It's the same.
So what is desired? Depends on the photographer. Sometimes there is no choice but to use high ISO because of lighting issues, not fast enough shutter speed, .. .etc. Some times people use high ISO because their cameras are good enough that the noise level is acceptable or they really want the grains in their photos for some artistic reasons.
But generally, most photographers aim for low ISO.
The other aspect of low ISO is especially when you are taking a Landscape shot, u wd want to use the lowest possible default ISO of the cam to capture as much details as possible. Obviously with low ISO the SS is longer hence to prevent movement set on a tripod and also for longer exposure you may want to get that smooth pleasing shot like a waterfall or waves.
To determine what is acceptable ISO to you, you'll just have to shoot the same scene several times with different ISO settings to finally determine what is an acceptable noise level you can handle.
In certain genres of photography, photographers tend to adhere to certain ISOs. For instance, landscape photographers like to use the lowest possible ISO settings to capture maximum detail, dynamic range (most of the time, this occurs at ISO 100-200), and to utilize longer shutter speeds to capture movements, such as cloud movement, light trails etc.
Event photographers have a tendency to set their ISOs at moderately high levels, such as ISO 400 - 1600. This is to ensure that their shutter speeds are fast enough to capture some sharp shots (this overcomes subject movement blur. Do not confuse this with focal blur)
Hope this helps.
first, do you know what does ISO do ?
A camera's ISO function increases the sensitity of yoru sensor
read more
http://www.articlesbase.com/digital-photography-articles/iso-explained-in-simple-terms-769030.html
high ISO and low iso. they are used in different situations. for an ISO of 200, shutter speed has to go around 1/6 on F2.8 compared to 1/30 f2.8 with iso 1250 ( this is measured now in my room light)
if you mean what the pic will turn out like, then take one at iso200 and another at iso3200 and compare them yourself, you should see the difference....
if you mean the process of taking a pic, then low iso will lead to lower shutter speed than the one taken at the higher iso.... how many stops difference will depend on the gap between your iso of the 2 pics (that is if you keep the same aperature)
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The other aspect of low ISO is especially when you are taking a Landscape shot, u wd want to use the lowest possible default ISO of the cam to capture as much details as possible. Obviously with low ISO the SS is longer hence to prevent movement set on a tripod and also for longer exposure you may want to get that smooth pleasing shot like a waterfall or waves.
Hi Al,
I have read that in some cases low ISO is used. Can i know what is the difference taking a picture with high and low ISO? Assuming that both settings will not get under or over exposed with the respective shutter speed set.
Please help to advice. Thanks.
Hi,
I wish i can. but my D90 is in the Service center due to the BGLOD (Blinking Green Light of Death). I just got it on 21 Nov 2009. ~Sigh...
Nevertheless, i am just too excited to wait to have an answer. Thanks.
WOW in over a month you've got quite some serious collection :bsmilie::
|Nikon D90|N 18-105mm f/3.5|N 50mm f/1.8D|N 70-300mm f/4|T 28-75mm f/2.8|T 70-200mm f/2.8|N SB-900|