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General Photography
Effective noise reduction - How do you do it?
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<blockquote data-quote="J-see" data-source="post: 386415" data-attributes="member: 31330"><p>I don't know about the D7100 but the D750 can manage quite some noise as long as I overexpose. If I need ISO 3200, I rather go one stop higher since that allows me to overexpose one stop more. Overexposed shots as 6400 usually work out better than correctly exposed at 3200. I use 0.3-1 for everything up to 2-3k and 1 to 2 stops for everything higher.</p><p></p><p>Even when birding and I can't gain that stop anywhere, I switch to matrix metering instead of center (if the environment is darker than the bird). That way the bird will become slightly overexposed automatically.</p><p></p><p>A great thing about the D750 is that I can even use exposure compensation in manual mode. My D3300 didn't do that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J-see, post: 386415, member: 31330"] I don't know about the D7100 but the D750 can manage quite some noise as long as I overexpose. If I need ISO 3200, I rather go one stop higher since that allows me to overexpose one stop more. Overexposed shots as 6400 usually work out better than correctly exposed at 3200. I use 0.3-1 for everything up to 2-3k and 1 to 2 stops for everything higher. Even when birding and I can't gain that stop anywhere, I switch to matrix metering instead of center (if the environment is darker than the bird). That way the bird will become slightly overexposed automatically. A great thing about the D750 is that I can even use exposure compensation in manual mode. My D3300 didn't do that. [/QUOTE]
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Effective noise reduction - How do you do it?
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