neuroanatomist said:scyrene said:dilbert said:To be honest, most everything looks crap on overcast days when there is no sunlight because colors are muted. Or maybe those that shoot ISO 3200 and above don't like color very much? Would explain a lot.
Portraits of birds, photographs of flowers, some portraits and architecture...Flat/soft light can be very useful*. Are you just talking about landscapes and birds in flight? You're extraordinarily closed-minded. That's fine, you have that right, but again please don't pretend your personal view is universal, or even mainstream (it may be the latter, but nothing you've said so far demonstrates that).
*Ironically, all these people who say they want better shadow lifting capabilities are aiming for images with less contrast. One easy way to achieve that is to shoot when the light is softer.
+1
Sure, pictures of an overcast sky are usually not satisfying, but it's often much better to take pictures of some subjects lit by an overcast sky. There's a reason I carry a pop-open diffuser when I'm out shooting flowers.
But I suppose people lacking in creativity might have trouble seeing the benefits of soft lighting.
Here in lies the irony of the latest tech: a superior, more advanced product can encourage an inferior result. Instead of using sound techniques the photographer can simply satisfy himself by suppressing highlights, lifting shadows, but the output from this lasted tech will be inferior to muggins with his old out of date 5D using grads or backet and blend or reflectors or, or, or,,,,,,,so it goes on.
I began to fall into this trap myself, not from shadow lifting ability because I normally am increasing shadows, but from the high iso performance of the 6D compared with the 5DII. In building where I had to work quickly for my panoramic interiors I began to use the 6D at high iso and hand hold with IS. Its much easier to do a fast sweeping panoramic hand held when I don't want people moving in the frame. Now although the modern tech has meant that these results are competent they do not match the technical results I get from 100 iso on a solid tripod.
Now I'm not for one minute suggesting that in some minor niche areas a camera such as the D810 isn't better and more advanced than a 5DIII, or 5Ds, but everything has to be given a context, otherwise it becomes meaningless, and this is where a review site such as DPR is going off track IMO in order to try and find differences in the cameras to report on. The 5Ds shot that they did of the girl with fill flash taken half an hour after sunset into the western sky which then had shadows lifted in post was not given any context - apart from the exposure information that actually told the story. Anyone who was not better informed would read that and think that you get awful noise if you lift 5Ds shadows a stop or so.
Incidentally somewhere in this thread Rishi states in his defence that he wrote in DPR something like "the 80D has much improved DR over previous Canon cameras". Yet in the summary of pros and cons of the camera in the cons they say something like "less DR than rivals". Yes you can lift shadows four stops on the 80D but six stops on the Sonikon whatever. Context has gone out of the window. 6 stops. Jeez, many scenes haven't even got a 6 stop EV range.
Be a brave lad rishi and send me that raw file: [email protected]
Upvote
0