privatebydesign said:
rishi_sanyal said:
Jack Douglas said:
If Rishi is willing to take them to heart, there are valid points being made that will help him to improve and and we're not talking about Canon praise here, just equal treatment. That would be a good outcome.
It's like a kid being king of the castle and a dozen others climbing up to knock him off. That is unproductive and serves no purpose, and so we should simply continue to give useful suggestions, maybe sometimes with a little less harshness.
Jack
But my question is: is anyone willing to take to heart the points
I've made in response to many of the points raised here? Last I checked, you admitted to not really reading all the content of my posts. I know there's a lot of content here, but I've spent countless hours reading and responding to those made by others here, incorporating useful feedback when it's actually valid/useful, but mostly responding to skewed/erroneous claims made (mostly by neuro) to fit a preconceived narrative to discredit us so as to not have to accept
any critical remark we make on cameras that are sacred to forum members here.
Which means: I've actually read much of the feedback/points made here. But it feels like few have read my points. And those who have (there are some of you that have) do at least, to their credit, respond with 'good points'.
Thank you, by the way.
The rest of you: please read my points before summarily judging and hastily responding. And thanks to those who are polite.
No you haven't. You argue semantics, ad nauseum, meanwhile you avoid any mention of many of the points that have been raised about you.
My pet peeve is the 5dsr image you used to demonstrate poor dr, we both know that is a dishonest representation of the cameras capabilities. Now I am not saying more dr isn't useful on occasions, but to try to say that is the best that camera could do in that situation and it is a failure because of that is dishonest.
Post the RAW and prove me wrong.
No, it's not, and I'm tired of arguing this with you. All you and others have done is raise completely invalid points about how because the flash and background exposure are independent, I could've nailed the perfect exposure.
What does the flash have to do with this?? ???
I never once talked about the model exposure. I said that in order to protect the gradient in the sky, I chose an exposure that placed them near, but not at, clipping. In which case the foreground falls to darkness. The foreground, not the model. Tonemapping that foreground, which is no longer illuminated by light so long after sunset, brings into the image noise on a camera with limited dynamic range (limited for that scene). Just like
There's nothing surprising about that. We all already know old Canon sensors were challenged in DR for such scenes - half an hour to 45 min after sunset is one of the highest dynamic range scenes you could come across. Same issue in my tulip image here:
https://www.dpreview.com/articles/3673531883/dxomark-eos-5ds-r-sensor-is-highest-ranked-canon-sensor-yet/2
... the only difference there being I perfectly ETTR'd the tulip shot, because I had the time to do so via bracketing. The next 1/3 EV longer exposure clipped skies/clouds irrecoverably. With the model shot, I had a tad more headroom in the Raw, despite the camera indicating clipped channels. But that's beside the point - it's unreasonable for anyone but an armchair forum troll to expect an actual photographer to perfectly ETTR (getting the brightest tones you care about within 1/3 EV of clipping) anything but static studio/landscape imagery. Without the tools that no camera maker but Phase One provides (Raw channel clipping in-camera), you simply will not perfectly ETTR every shot. So there were actually two points I was trying to make: (1) even a perfectly ETTR'd shot of a scene like that challenges the dynamic range of the 5DS; furthermore, (2)
actual photographers who don't sit there with a computer and RawDigger to check that RGGB 14-bit Raw values are approaching, but not exceeding, clipping also benefit from extended latitude for those sorts of scenes where the photographer wants to ensure the colors in the sky aren't lost while actually, you know, trying to
take pictures. That is, direct the model/set up the lighting/focus/compose, etc.
Armchair forum critics are completely disconnected with the realities actual pro photographers face. Tell a pro wedding photographer to perfectly nail exposure so that Raw green channel values are exactly within a 1/3 of a stop of clipping, and he/she will laugh.
Oh, and someone else (you?) blamed me for blaming the camera's automatic choice of exposure. ??? That shot was exposed completely
manually. How could I be blaming the camera's auto exposure?
I have little interest in engaging in such irrational arguments (it's too bad - for my own health - that I have enough of an interest to respond at all...)