Even if the 5D Mark III has lower DR than the competition, who cares????? It still has good DR! That's like saying a billionaire worth $2 billion has less money than Bill Gates. Who cares?
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Indeed.bdunbar79 said:Even if the 5D Mark III has lower DR than the competition, who cares????? It still has good DR! That's like saying a billionaire worth $2 billion has less money than Bill Gates. Who cares?
The d800 only beats the 5d II and III in dynamic range at ISO 100-400 after that there is no advantage. I don't know what all the hype is about. You need a tripod, or triple the shutter speed to focal length to take advantage of such resolution. It certainly is not a great walk about camera. Personally I think the d3s makes far superior files at high ISO's.bdunbar79 said:Even if the 5D Mark III has lower DR than the competition, who cares????? It still has good DR! That's like saying a billionaire worth $2 billion has less money than Bill Gates. Who cares?
bdunbar79 said:Nice shot.
Kernuak said:No doubt I'm wasting my breath, no-one has listened up to now about DR being only a small part of the whole. The photographer will make a much larger difference than any perceived deficiencies in a camera, whatever it may be.
Neeneko said:Kernuak said:No doubt I'm wasting my breath, no-one has listened up to now about DR being only a small part of the whole. The photographer will make a much larger difference than any perceived deficiencies in a camera, whatever it may be.
DR is a small part unless you hit a wall, just like AF, MP, and high ISO are 'small parts' unless you hit limits with them, at which point they become big deals.
I regularly hit DR limit of my camera and need to use HDR to make the shots work, though I am planning to invest some grad ND filters, but those have their limits (i.e. are best when you have a nice strait horizon).
bdunbar79 said:HDR is okay to do as long as you know what you're doing. I've seen some bad HDR photos, haha.
poias said:Good photographers can somewhat compensate using HDR techniques, but the facts don't change that 5D Mark III has much lower DR than the competition.
Actually, I think that wildlife photography would benefot more from a high DR than landscape photography, because it's easier to control the light in landscapes. The argument was that professionals need high DR, but the truth is actually that they shoot landscapes in the golden hours, when light is more diffuse, as someone mentioned and will almost invariably use grad filters (as I do and you don't always need to have a straight horizon, that's what soft grads are for). To some extent, that is also true for wildlife, but there are some animals, where that isn't possible, then more DR would benefit (oystercatchers are one animal that comes to mind). However, many pro wildlife photographers (not all by any means) will then balance the light with fill flash and some use flash extenders. Of course, the low frame rate of the D800 is then likely to be a greater barrier than the lower DR of the 5D MkIII, depending on what is being photographed. In fact even the 6 fps of the 5D MkIII won't be enough for some things, but the 50% increase over the D800 would be useful. I also know from experience with the 7D, that the higher pixel density sensors change the rules of at least 1/focal length for sharp photos. The higher density sensors are less forgiving of focus inaccuracies and motion, which means pushing the ISO higher, where the 5D MkIII has the advantage in DR anyway. There aren't many days in the UK where I can drop below ISO 400 when shooting fast moving wildlife.Marsu42 said:poias said:Good photographers can somewhat compensate using HDR techniques, but the facts don't change that 5D Mark III has much lower DR than the competition.
I don't know why people are saying only landscape needs high dr - as soon as I'm shooting an animal with black & white fur or trying to raise the shadows I'm always wishing for more dr no matter what the scene is.
Canon raw files are said to have more potential for highlight recovery than Nikon, and while I cannot make the comparison myself Lightroom is certainly able to recover a lot with ettr images without using hdr - but it's annoying to to this with every second shot.
Kernuak said:Actually, I think that wildlife photography would benefot more from a high DR than landscape photography, because it's easier to control the light in landscapes. The argument was that professionals need high DR, but the truth is actually that they shoot landscapes in the golden hours, when light is more diffuse, as someone mentioned and will almost invariably use grad filters (as I do and you don't always need to have a straight horizon, that's what soft grads are for). To some extent, that is also true for wildlife, but there are some animals, where that isn't possible, then more DR would benefit (oystercatchers are one animal that comes to mind). However, many pro wildlife photographers (not all by any means) will then balance the light with fill flash and some use flash extenders. Of course, the low frame rate of the D800 is then likely to be a greater barrier than the lower DR of the 5D MkIII, depending on what is being photographed. In fact even the 6 fps of the 5D MkIII won't be enough for some things, but the 50% increase over the D800 would be useful. I also know from experience with the 7D, that the higher pixel density sensors change the rules of at least 1/focal length for sharp photos. The higher density sensors are less forgiving of focus inaccuracies and motion, which means pushing the ISO higher, where the 5D MkIII has the advantage in DR anyway. There aren't many days in the UK where I can drop below ISO 400 when shooting fast moving wildlife.
Marsu42 said:I don't know why people are saying only landscape needs high dr - as soon as I'm shooting an animal with black & white fur or trying to raise the shadows I'm always wishing for more dr no matter what the scene is.
Marsu42 said:poias said:Good photographers can somewhat compensate using HDR techniques, but the facts don't change that 5D Mark III has much lower DR than the competition.
I don't know why people are saying only landscape needs high dr - as soon as I'm shooting an animal with black & white fur or trying to raise the shadows I'm always wishing for more dr no matter what the scene is.
Canon raw files are said to have more potential for highlight recovery than Nikon, and while I cannot make the comparison myself Lightroom is certainly able to recover a lot with ettr images without using hdr - but it's annoying to to this with every second shot.
scrappydog said:To those that don't think DR is too important, I provide the following hand-held shot. Although it is an extreme example, it demonstrates how a little more DR could make more the frame more usable. A crop is fine, but the entire frame is horrid. I could not get this shot in magic hour, and I could not take it on a tripod (HDR) or use an ND grad.
poias said:If you are a landscape shooter and are not married to Canon, then you will get much, much more bang for the buck if you use D800/E.
iso79 said:Too bad there aren't any good Nikon lenses that will utilize the full DR potential of the 800/E.
poias said:No FF lens can utilize a 36mpx sensor to its "full DR potential".
poias said:coming close to the full potential yields far greater IQ than whatever inferior sensor Canon is stuck on, at least for landscape photography.
scrappydog said:According to reviews that I have read, the 5DIII has a tad less dynamic range than the 5DII, and the 5DII has a total latitude of 11.2 stops, of which about 8.5 stops is usable
bdunbar79 said:It's called using a DSLR people. No, DR will not be infinite and superb, on any DSLR camera.