Re: Burst shooting for landscape...umm
privatebydesign said:
slclick said:
Spray and pray in landscape/static shots? Help me out with that one.
Do I like the idea of 100mp images at 100fps? No! But I'm sure it will happen and those that apply that technology well will get images that we dream of now on a regular basis. It doesn't mean those that get to nicer places, have better lighting more interesting subjects and are 'better' photographers won't make more compelling images with that tech, it just means the bar will be raised higher still.
Well put. Now imagine a camera like that doing a
burst of 200 images in 2 seconds at 100 megapixels and combining it into one picture. When finished, it will delete the 200 image-files and only save the stacked one at full resolution. By doing so, you wouldn't even have a problem with space on your memory card! Even if you'd shoot at ISO 102400, there would be almost zero noise left while details stay perfectly, except for eventual banding. Though I wonder when there will be a camera which does image stacking (on demand) in-camera - AND all the aligning work. Of course this is only applicable for mostly static shots. It should be possible today, but I think only cameras with processing power like the 1DX(2) might be able to do that in a
reasonable amount of time - but I guess even that camera would still need a minute or two for proper aligning and stacking only a few images.
Heck, even a smartphone could do that stuff internally (which would basically eradicate almost all of the noise without loosing
ANY details). I think it's just a matter of time until we see that tech properly implemented and functioning at good speed, easily usable for everyone.
btw; I think the EOS M10 for example does this in a limited fashion, when shooting in nightscape burst mode (3 shots combined into one picture). Very handy feature.
The EOS 6D also has a feature called multi-shot NR, but it does only stack the images, not align them. So it's use is very limited when you don't have a tripod with you.