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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D750
D750 ISO Performance
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<blockquote data-quote="Horoscope Fish" data-source="post: 431162" data-attributes="member: 13090"><p>Photography is a juggling act between aperture, shutter speed and ISO. All the time, every time. You simply have to learn to work within those parameters. In a situation where you're shooting with a hot-shoe mounted flash, and using TTL, my go-to adjustments would be ISO and/or the flash compensation button to get the exposure I wanted out of the shot. I find digital "noise" the easiest thing to correct for in post processing, so it's the thing I worry about the least. I concern myself far more with shutter speed and aperture because those factors really determine the mood of the shot; ISO matters far less so, if at all, from an aesthetic standpoint.</p><p></p><p>Lastly, digital noise will *always* be more prevalent in the shadows than it will be in the highlights. It's not an ISO/noise thing, <em>per se</em> really, so much as an ISO/noise thing when shooting in <em>low light</em> where noise will appear the strongest. As someone pointed out above, try shooting the same LOW LIGHT shot with your D7000 and your D750, both at the same ISO, say 6400 or 12800, and I'm sure you'll a significant difference between how well the two cameras deal with noise.</p><p><span style="color: #FFFFFF">....</span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Horoscope Fish, post: 431162, member: 13090"] Photography is a juggling act between aperture, shutter speed and ISO. All the time, every time. You simply have to learn to work within those parameters. In a situation where you're shooting with a hot-shoe mounted flash, and using TTL, my go-to adjustments would be ISO and/or the flash compensation button to get the exposure I wanted out of the shot. I find digital "noise" the easiest thing to correct for in post processing, so it's the thing I worry about the least. I concern myself far more with shutter speed and aperture because those factors really determine the mood of the shot; ISO matters far less so, if at all, from an aesthetic standpoint. Lastly, digital noise will *always* be more prevalent in the shadows than it will be in the highlights. It's not an ISO/noise thing, [i]per se[/i] really, so much as an ISO/noise thing when shooting in [I]low light[/I] where noise will appear the strongest. As someone pointed out above, try shooting the same LOW LIGHT shot with your D7000 and your D750, both at the same ISO, say 6400 or 12800, and I'm sure you'll a significant difference between how well the two cameras deal with noise. [COLOR="#FFFFFF"]....[/COLOR] [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D750
D750 ISO Performance
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