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Another Mini ISO Tutorial
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<blockquote data-quote="Steve B" data-source="post: 219577" data-attributes="member: 15754"><p>It seems like really bad practice to follow this table. I keep my ISO as low as possible (native or base ISO if possible) and only adjust it upwards if I need depth of field or to stop action that I can't get at a lower ISO. There are many times when I am shooting indoor sports that I need to go above 1600 to get a high enough shutter speed but there are many times you can shoot indoors with low ISO as long as you can either open the aperture up or use a slower shutter speed. This table just seems like you would be losing a lot of DR and introducing noise in a lot of situations where you don't need to.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Steve B, post: 219577, member: 15754"] It seems like really bad practice to follow this table. I keep my ISO as low as possible (native or base ISO if possible) and only adjust it upwards if I need depth of field or to stop action that I can't get at a lower ISO. There are many times when I am shooting indoor sports that I need to go above 1600 to get a high enough shutter speed but there are many times you can shoot indoors with low ISO as long as you can either open the aperture up or use a slower shutter speed. This table just seems like you would be losing a lot of DR and introducing noise in a lot of situations where you don't need to. [/QUOTE]
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