Village Idiot
No longer a newbie, moving up!
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- #46
This was more of a topic of discussion about how improved technology can change how we take pictures. I know not everyone can do this and as a fact, attempting it with my 5D MKII would I would get banding with chroma noise like crazy when attempting this to any extreme measures.
And I'm not saying to use it for every photo. I'll still use my lights as I can create drama with different types of lighting that you couldn't get with ambient, I just think it's a new tool to get photos you otherwise couldn't without go through a lot more work. This is something that I've see a lot of wedding photographers work with. Those are the types of photographer that shoot in rapidly changing environments with varying light.
I understand this was intended as a discussion, but this kind of X vs Y dichotomy tends to lead to fractured discussions and people getting defensive.
The bolded statement also implies a certain level of judgment about what kind of "work" is more or less useful for someone. For you, setting up lighting might be onerous and time-wasting, but others might feel the same way about post processing in front of a computer.
I'm not trying to fault you for initiating the discussion, and I realize my opening sentence also sounded judgmental and I apologize for it. I've simply seen many of these threads started in this manner descend too quickly into bickering about what is better. I've seen better discussions when the question was more open-ended and more explicitly discussed context.
Yeah, but correcting an underexposed photo introduces a lot of image noise, but it`s better than loosing the image i suppose.
John.
Actually, the noise is minimal depending on how much you increase the exposure and with these new Nikons, it's more like film grain and no real chroma noise