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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3200
Grainy Noisy Photos ?? with examples Help Required.
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<blockquote data-quote="10 Gauge" data-source="post: 471650" data-attributes="member: 39102"><p>Night shooting depends on how you are trying to capture your image. Pump up the ISO if you're trying to catch details in a dark or poorly lit setting. Keep the ISO lower if you're trying to get an artistic style shot of something that may be lit up and the rest of the photo can be dark. There are a ton of variables for night shooting to be able to give you an ISO setting to adhere to. </p><p></p><p>Example; if I were trying to get a picture of my dogs on their bed at night with only the light from a nearby room as my light source I'd shoot high ISO to properly expose the dogs. If I were in the same setting but wanted to take a picture of something on my TV I could keep the ISO lower. Not the greatest examples, I know. </p><p></p><p>Sent from my HTC One M8 using Tapatalk</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="10 Gauge, post: 471650, member: 39102"] Night shooting depends on how you are trying to capture your image. Pump up the ISO if you're trying to catch details in a dark or poorly lit setting. Keep the ISO lower if you're trying to get an artistic style shot of something that may be lit up and the rest of the photo can be dark. There are a ton of variables for night shooting to be able to give you an ISO setting to adhere to. Example; if I were trying to get a picture of my dogs on their bed at night with only the light from a nearby room as my light source I'd shoot high ISO to properly expose the dogs. If I were in the same setting but wanted to take a picture of something on my TV I could keep the ISO lower. Not the greatest examples, I know. Sent from my HTC One M8 using Tapatalk [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3200
Grainy Noisy Photos ?? with examples Help Required.
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