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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3300
how high an ISO can you set and still get mnimal noise_with 3300
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<blockquote data-quote="rocketman122" data-source="post: 550755" data-attributes="member: 14443"><p>since no one wants to give a definitive answer, Ill jump in. imo iso 1600/2000 (maybe 3200) would be the most id shoot with till I learned what it can do and how comfortable I am wih it. when I got my D3s, I was very scared to pass iso4000, yesterday I shot a wedding and was shooting at the dance floor at iso8000.</p><p></p><p> it also depends if im shooting a white/bright object or something in shade which is black to begin with. I had the camera and had to shoot a wedding and only reading upon the d3300, then thats what id use. be aware though, and this is critical, primes will almost always give a better outcome in IQ. and flash as well also lower grain showing up. and exposure is critical as well.</p><p></p><p></p><p>see this article here</p><p><a href="http://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/53149869" target="_blank">Some low light shot with D3300: Nikon DX SLR (D40-D90, D3000-D7200) Talk Forum: Digital Photography Review</a></p><p></p><p>notice the back to back images of the cafe seats and he shot them 6400 and 3200. I would prefer the 3200 over the 6400 (although I think it was handheld and his focus was different for both. image looks crisper at 3200 there), but what I mean of bright vs shade... this is quite a bright scene that doesnt expose grain badly. </p><p></p><p>now go down to the tea kettle image. its shot with no ambient light in the scene naturally (no flash), so grain is very well pronounced.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rocketman122, post: 550755, member: 14443"] since no one wants to give a definitive answer, Ill jump in. imo iso 1600/2000 (maybe 3200) would be the most id shoot with till I learned what it can do and how comfortable I am wih it. when I got my D3s, I was very scared to pass iso4000, yesterday I shot a wedding and was shooting at the dance floor at iso8000. it also depends if im shooting a white/bright object or something in shade which is black to begin with. I had the camera and had to shoot a wedding and only reading upon the d3300, then thats what id use. be aware though, and this is critical, primes will almost always give a better outcome in IQ. and flash as well also lower grain showing up. and exposure is critical as well. see this article here [URL="http://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/53149869"]Some low light shot with D3300: Nikon DX SLR (D40-D90, D3000-D7200) Talk Forum: Digital Photography Review[/URL] notice the back to back images of the cafe seats and he shot them 6400 and 3200. I would prefer the 3200 over the 6400 (although I think it was handheld and his focus was different for both. image looks crisper at 3200 there), but what I mean of bright vs shade... this is quite a bright scene that doesnt expose grain badly. now go down to the tea kettle image. its shot with no ambient light in the scene naturally (no flash), so grain is very well pronounced. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3300
how high an ISO can you set and still get mnimal noise_with 3300
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