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Photography Q&A
Unreal grain
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<blockquote data-quote="Bob Blaylock" data-source="post: 374154" data-attributes="member: 16749"><p>It is to be expected that at higher ISO settings, there will be more noise in the image. It can be roughly thought of as analogous to the fact that with film, higher-speed films tend to produce grainier images than lower-speed films.</p><p></p><p> To a great degree, this is an area where technological advancement is making mor emodern sensors better than older ones. The D7000 is a fairly old model now, so it cannot reasonably be expected to perform as well in this regard as a more modern model.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p> You're using a D3300, which is one of the newest, most modern models. It stands to reason that its performance with regard to low-light, high ISO settings, and sensor noise, is going to be far better than that of a D7000.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bob Blaylock, post: 374154, member: 16749"] It is to be expected that at higher ISO settings, there will be more noise in the image. It can be roughly thought of as analogous to the fact that with film, higher-speed films tend to produce grainier images than lower-speed films. To a great degree, this is an area where technological advancement is making mor emodern sensors better than older ones. The D7000 is a fairly old model now, so it cannot reasonably be expected to perform as well in this regard as a more modern model. You're using a D3300, which is one of the newest, most modern models. It stands to reason that its performance with regard to low-light, high ISO settings, and sensor noise, is going to be far better than that of a D7000. [/QUOTE]
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