sanj said:rpt said:Expose to the right...cayenne said:I'm not familiar with ETTR...what is that?
Do explain to him 'expose to the right', I am sure he does not understand that.
That would be great. BTW, how much do you push to the right in your indoor sports shots?bdunbar79 said:wickidwombat said:bdunbar79 said:Just a quick example. I totally overexposed this shot, because it was so damn dark down there and midcourt was so damn bright. Much easier and cleaner to bring down in post vs. underexposing and lifting:
can you show the unedited shot for reference
also i'm guessing you shot with the 1Dx which will be even better than the 5dmk3
Well, shoot yeah, that's right I did. I will grab the RAW file anyways, if I've got it, let me look.
privatebydesign said:Cleaning up the OP's file was very easy.
If you shoot RAW you have to take the time to learn to process it, if you don't, can't or won't you are better off shooting a custom Picture Style jpeg.
privatebydesign said:Cleaning up the OP's file was very easy.
If you shoot RAW you have to take the time to learn to process it, if you don't, can't or won't you are better off shooting a custom Picture Style jpeg.
wickidwombat said:To be honest if your friend was wondering that, then I'm wondering what he was doing shooting weddings in the first place.PhotographAdventure said:iMagic said:F9 indoors?
My friend who used to photograph weddings once wondered why his flash couldn't keep up at f5.6 when inside. I have enough troubles at f2.8.
Dick said:privatebydesign said:Cleaning up the OP's file was very easy.
If you shoot RAW you have to take the time to learn to process it, if you don't, can't or won't you are better off shooting a custom Picture Style jpeg.
Just curious, what did you do to it? I have my own ways of getting some noise out, but I bet there are better methods.
rpt said:That would be great. BTW, how much do you push to the right in your indoor sports shots?bdunbar79 said:wickidwombat said:bdunbar79 said:Just a quick example. I totally overexposed this shot, because it was so damn dark down there and midcourt was so damn bright. Much easier and cleaner to bring down in post vs. underexposing and lifting:
can you show the unedited shot for reference
also i'm guessing you shot with the 1Dx which will be even better than the 5dmk3
Well, shoot yeah, that's right I did. I will grab the RAW file anyways, if I've got it, let me look.
bdunbar79 said:Better examples: Photo 1 is the unedited RAW file converted straight to jpg. I've then included two versions of edited photos. You can edit it them any way you'd want, I just applied two presets I happened to have to illustrate the point. This shot is at ISO 5000 and shot about +2/3 at this end of the court.
Thanks! I was guessing +1 EV. Was not sure about that. While shooting film on my AE1 I was "told" that EC needed to be -1/3 and that had to be compensated by setting the ISO appropriately - well I did, and magically most prints came out fine.bdunbar79 said:rpt said:That would be great. BTW, how much do you push to the right in your indoor sports shots?bdunbar79 said:wickidwombat said:bdunbar79 said:Just a quick example. I totally overexposed this shot, because it was so damn dark down there and midcourt was so damn bright. Much easier and cleaner to bring down in post vs. underexposing and lifting:
can you show the unedited shot for reference
also i'm guessing you shot with the 1Dx which will be even better than the 5dmk3
Well, shoot yeah, that's right I did. I will grab the RAW file anyways, if I've got it, let me look.
With a 1Dx, on CWA, my meter reading typically reads anywhere from +1/3 to +1 EV. I keep it in that window, or try to. I've gone up as high as +1 2/3 and it still came out fine in post-processing, but was pretty bright. With older cams, I kept changing the ISO to keep it around 2/3, but with the 1Dx this isn't necessary if you have time to post-process because the RAW files are just so nice.
GMCPhotographics said:wickidwombat said:To be honest if your friend was wondering that, then I'm wondering what he was doing shooting weddings in the first place.PhotographAdventure said:iMagic said:F9 indoors?
My friend who used to photograph weddings once wondered why his flash couldn't keep up at f5.6 when inside. I have enough troubles at f2.8.
Lol....which says a lot about a large amount of the current crop of new wedding photographers....have camera...can click a button in Auto. After all, P is for Professional..right?
distant.star said:GMCPhotographics said:wickidwombat said:To be honest if your friend was wondering that, then I'm wondering what he was doing shooting weddings in the first place.PhotographAdventure said:iMagic said:F9 indoors?
My friend who used to photograph weddings once wondered why his flash couldn't keep up at f5.6 when inside. I have enough troubles at f2.8.
Lol....which says a lot about a large amount of the current crop of new wedding photographers....have camera...can click a button in Auto. After all, P is for Professional..right?
Do you think this is really true? It's disheartening for me to think that any professional photographers are shooting this way. Most of the young folks I talk with who are getting into the business have some decent training and really understand theory and their equipment. I can't see any of them working that way.
dilbert said:cayenne said:This is is at ISO4000, and I've seen others post at this high with no problems like I'm seeing.
ISO 4000 is not a "real" ISO.
The "real" ISO settings are 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600, 3200, (maybe) 6400.
The "inbetweeners" (320, 640, 1250, 5000, 4000, etc) are all one of the above underexposed and then pulled up.
dilbert said:bdunbar79 said:Better examples: Photo 1 is the unedited RAW file converted straight to jpg. I've then included two versions of edited photos. You can edit it them any way you'd want, I just applied two presets I happened to have to illustrate the point. This shot is at ISO 5000 and shot about +2/3 at this end of the court.
At ISO 5000 with +2/3, you've introduced more noise due to the drop in IQ as a result of amplification than you have compensated for with overexposure.
dilbert said:bdunbar79 said:dilbert said:bdunbar79 said:Better examples: Photo 1 is the unedited RAW file converted straight to jpg. I've then included two versions of edited photos. You can edit it them any way you'd want, I just applied two presets I happened to have to illustrate the point. This shot is at ISO 5000 and shot about +2/3 at this end of the court.
At ISO 5000 with +2/3, you've introduced more noise due to the drop in IQ as a result of amplification than you have compensated for with overexposure.
Wrong.
What makes you believe that my comment is wrong?