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General Photography
Balancing Exposure and Processing
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<blockquote data-quote="Eyelight" data-source="post: 409297" data-attributes="member: 24753"><p>An observation.</p><p></p><p>Whrereas the sensor receives the same amount of light at the same exposure settings regardless of ISO, in low light, the sensor doesn't receive enough light to create all the colors in the image. This is when the camera ISO setting tells the processor to "build" the rest of the image.</p><p></p><p>What is missing from the ISO 100 shots is information added by the in-camera processing to an image that wasn't saturated enough on the sensor to show the true colors.</p><p></p><p>I think some of the examples shown are remarkable, and I'm still interested in where the breaking point is. But would have to add that I'm not seeing a reason to bypass the camera's capability to fill in the missing information in an underexposed image.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Eyelight, post: 409297, member: 24753"] An observation. Whrereas the sensor receives the same amount of light at the same exposure settings regardless of ISO, in low light, the sensor doesn't receive enough light to create all the colors in the image. This is when the camera ISO setting tells the processor to "build" the rest of the image. What is missing from the ISO 100 shots is information added by the in-camera processing to an image that wasn't saturated enough on the sensor to show the true colors. I think some of the examples shown are remarkable, and I'm still interested in where the breaking point is. But would have to add that I'm not seeing a reason to bypass the camera's capability to fill in the missing information in an underexposed image. [/QUOTE]
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