Forkie
Been spending a lot of time on here!
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2011
- Messages
- 2,292
- Reaction score
- 920
- Location
- Chiswick, London, UK
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos NOT OK to edit
Looking at the body, I'd miss my focus area and focus mode switches!
I'm interested in the Canon, not for personal use but to compare technologies. If I had the $ I'd buy one of each![]()
I'm just glad the D800 looks like it will fit nicely in my kit. Not replace my D700 but accent it.
What sight has these files?Have you guys downloaded the high ISO RAW files and played with them? ISO 3200 is better on the D800 than theD700, LR4 editing workflow feels just as quick as D700 processing. It's an awesome camera and I'm really getting excited.
Have you guys downloaded the high ISO RAW files and played with them? ISO 3200 is better on the D800 than theD700, LR4 editing workflow feels just as quick as D700 processing. It's an awesome camera and I'm really getting excited.
Have you guys downloaded the high ISO RAW files and played with them? ISO 3200 is better on the D800 than theD700, LR4 editing workflow feels just as quick as D700 processing. It's an awesome camera and I'm really getting excited.
The bitchfight between the D700 fans and the D800 fans is quite interesting. In every respect the D800 has worse noise than the D700 and statistical analysis across the recorded picture will confirm this. However all that changes when you actually stop pixel peeping and look at the damn picture you just took.
The far higher resolution has the effect of making the noise pixels smaller. You can compare this to having a film with a finer grain. The result is more detail and a *more pleasing* noise response across the image. That and with the additional detail and smaller pixels you can do significantly more noise reduction without squashing the visible detail in your picture.
Ultimately there are now two camps on the noise performance, those who compare 100% shots of the D700 to 100% shots of the D800 (as asinine as pixel peeping in my opinion), and those who compare 100% shots of the D700 to 57% shots of the D800.
Have you guys downloaded the high ISO RAW files and played with them? ISO 3200 is better on the D800 than theD700, LR4 editing workflow feels just as quick as D700 processing. It's an awesome camera and I'm really getting excited.
The bitchfight between the D700 fans and the D800 fans is quite interesting. In every respect the D800 has worse noise than the D700 and statistical analysis across the recorded picture will confirm this. However all that changes when you actually stop pixel peeping and look at the damn picture you just took.
The far higher resolution has the effect of making the noise pixels smaller. You can compare this to having a film with a finer grain. The result is more detail and a *more pleasing* noise response across the image. That and with the additional detail and smaller pixels you can do significantly more noise reduction without squashing the visible detail in your picture.
Ultimately there are now two camps on the noise performance, those who compare 100% shots of the D700 to 100% shots of the D800 (as asinine as pixel peeping in my opinion), and those who compare 100% shots of the D700 to 57% shots of the D800.
I simply expected the D800 to blow the D700 away so bad I had to scrap my D700 and have one. Its too close for me to do such. If I was buying new I'd buy the D800 of course, but it doesn't seem all that to trade up to. Thats my only gripe. Perhaps I'm wrong and once it comes out I'll be forced to change my mind and make the D700 my back-up cam, but I'm just not feeling it yet.