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General Photography
ISO settings
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<blockquote data-quote="Fred Kingston_RIP" data-source="post: 90588" data-attributes="member: 10742"><p>The basic answer to your question is Yes... The higher the ISO, the more noise is introduced... if you subsequently increase the image size, the noise becomes more apparent as sort of a grainy effect... </p><p></p><p>In a studio setting (generally) you control the lighting. That allows you to maintain/use a low ISO setting. The lower the setting, the less noise. At ISO 100-200, there is almost no noise with today's sensors... You might want to review the ISO settings in your camera, and select a low ISO, as opposed to letting the camera setting of ISO-Auto select the ISO...</p><p></p><p>If you do experience unacceptable "noise", then there are software methods in post-processing to eliminate the noise. There are even specialized software programs for correcting this single issue...</p><p></p><p>That's not say you shouldn't experiment with higher ISO settings when the situation warrants it...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fred Kingston_RIP, post: 90588, member: 10742"] The basic answer to your question is Yes... The higher the ISO, the more noise is introduced... if you subsequently increase the image size, the noise becomes more apparent as sort of a grainy effect... In a studio setting (generally) you control the lighting. That allows you to maintain/use a low ISO setting. The lower the setting, the less noise. At ISO 100-200, there is almost no noise with today's sensors... You might want to review the ISO settings in your camera, and select a low ISO, as opposed to letting the camera setting of ISO-Auto select the ISO... If you do experience unacceptable "noise", then there are software methods in post-processing to eliminate the noise. There are even specialized software programs for correcting this single issue... That's not say you shouldn't experiment with higher ISO settings when the situation warrants it... [/QUOTE]
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