jrista said:privatebydesign said:LetTheRightLensIn said:Yeah but what are you basing this on? What makes you so sure the highs were the same and that you are not just getting tricked by the different default mid-tone point placement and default metering placement for Nikon?
It doesn't matter, and that is what you theoretical procrastinators don't get.
In Kieth's example with a Canon file those highlights are recoverable, if that was a Nikon file I do not believe they would have been. I don't profess to know why, and it normally takes you procrastinators a few years to catch up, but that is what I have found to be true, presumably Kieth and Sporgon have found that too.
I think your still missing the point we are trying to make, though. It doesn't matter if they aren't "as recoverable" with the default metered settings. If that turns out to be a regular problem, then you have TONS of room to underexpose with a D810 or any other Exmor camera, preserve the highlights and ensure they have detail, and you'll still have tons of shadow recovery ability.
What you guys are talking about is just the default metered, tone-curved response in a RAW editor. The dynamic range of the sensor doesn't have anything to do with that. More dynamic range is more dynamic range. You can have highlights as richly colored and detailed as you want to by properly utilizing the greater DR of an Exmor, without sacrificing the shadows.
You can make all the arguments you want about how incapable the average user might be in regards to actually being able to extract the most performance out of a camera like the D810. I think that's just more misdirection, though. If you look at what people are doing with those cameras, they clearly know how to put that extra DR to good use, how to extract the most performance from them. Especially photographers who know what RAW is and are going to be using RAW (which I think is a much greater percentage of those buying cameras above the $2000 mark than those buying below).
Even for those who start out not knowing much about how to use a digital camera are still capable of learning, and with more capable hardware comes the greater ease of producing amazing works of photographic art. I for one would love to see novices creating photos with rich blacks, instead of photos riddled with vertical banding (a fairly common sight on 500px "Fresh".) (Which I know for some, such as Sporgon, intrudes upon their prized elite status as a "real" photographer, a status for which they would apparently happily give up having better hardware in their own hands if it meant keeping the non-photographer masses non-photographers...a reasoning I honestly cannot fathom.)
I'm not missing the point, and I don't consider Nikon users dumb. I do take issue with constant references to "this is x amount better" when there is limited experience of both, and when that limited experience of both includes the obvious falsehood that both must be exposed the same, I cringe.
I am not saying Canon has more "high end DR" or that it has as much as Exmor, I am saying anybody that is so unfamiliar with the kit as to not know the differences in optimal exposures for both isn't going to get optimal results. Sure it might be classified as meter compensation, I have no problem with that, some cameras allow you to calibrate your meter; in the old film days we used to decide how far off the iso rating was to what we could actually shoot at, 1/3 stop was common for slide film.
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