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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3300
Blurry / underexposed indoor images
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<blockquote data-quote="gustafson" data-source="post: 494484" data-attributes="member: 40735"><p>Thanks for the responses to the follow-up. Dan, yes to using Auto ISO. However, I realize now I had set the max ISO to 3200, and the camera seems to have selected an ISO of 3200 for a majority of the shots, so looks like I inadvertently crippled its working range. Most of the blurry shots were in aperture priority, where the camera selected shutter times of 1/3-1/10s, and the blur could have been a combination of camera shake and subject movement. Even when I switched to shutter priority, the limit on max ISO produced less than ideal shots. Lesson learned on not limiting ISO and post-processing noise out of RAW instead!</p><p></p><p></p><p>Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gustafson, post: 494484, member: 40735"] Thanks for the responses to the follow-up. Dan, yes to using Auto ISO. However, I realize now I had set the max ISO to 3200, and the camera seems to have selected an ISO of 3200 for a majority of the shots, so looks like I inadvertently crippled its working range. Most of the blurry shots were in aperture priority, where the camera selected shutter times of 1/3-1/10s, and the blur could have been a combination of camera shake and subject movement. Even when I switched to shutter priority, the limit on max ISO produced less than ideal shots. Lesson learned on not limiting ISO and post-processing noise out of RAW instead! Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3300
Blurry / underexposed indoor images
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