justsomedude said:
Refurb7 said:
jmoya said:
I'm just hoping for more DR. Nikon and Sony kill Canon on this. MP is not that important to me and many others. I start getting noise from 100iso images by only pushing 1.5 stops in lightroom from RAW photos on my 5d mark III's. Unacceptable Canon!!!! I just can't give up all my L lenses. Looks like I may have to wait for the 6d mark II.
You must be doing something wrong. I've been shooting Canon for some 15 years and never have this problem.
Hey, I'm a Canon guy like most of us here. But there's not need to be flippant. It's been well documented all over the place that the 5D3 is way behind the Nikon and Sony offerings when it comes to shadow recovery. We can be honest about that without saying we're selling all our gear and switching sides...
I considered the old "A7RII switcheroo" last year. The photos those cameras are churning out just can't compete with anything Canon has on the market right now. The sensors are just insane when it comes to DR.
I've waited 14 months already... what's another 5 to see what Canon has up their sleeves?
I hope the 5D4 has the DR everyone here is hoping for. Fingers crossed...
I'm not flippant. I recognize that Nikon and Sony have more dynamic range and that it can be useful in some situations. The photo you linked to is a perfect example. However, and this is a big HOWEVER, you can use your Canon to make a photo that's just as good as that Nikon example. You expose it so that you don't have to push the shadows that much. That's how photography was done for the past 180 years and it worked out pretty well.
I learned photography in the film era and learned to never rely on pushing shadows to extremes because that always looked bad. Now Nikon and Sony offer the ability to push shadows to extremes and that's pretty cool. But I've worked for years without pushing shadows to extremes, and my photos look OK. If you look at the number of high level and world-renowned pros using Canon (fine art, commercial, editorial, photojournalism, wedding, portrait), their photos look OK too (at least OK). So you have to ask yourself, How is it that someone has noisy photos at ISO 100 using a Canon camera? It's mind-boggling. My average ISO is probably ISO 1600 and noise is a complete non-issue.
Further, if someone actually has this problem, such that they are desperate for Canon to solve it (calling Canon "unacceptable!"), and Sony or Nikon solves it for them, then it's equally mind-boggling that they would have not switched to Sony or Nikon at the earliest opportunity. It just makes no sense to linger with Canon if one needs 1.5 stop (or more) pushes and one's ISO 100 photos somehow have troublesome noise.