willie_901
Veteran
These artifacts are consistent with insufficient bits required to represent the continuous change of the tone of the light. The result is a discontinuous representation. There is not enough data (bit depth) to accurately model the light. The issue could be purely due to digitization limitations or entirely caused by raw rendering problems. It could be the sensor and rendering software just don't work well together. After all, the world-wide usage of the D100 sensor is minuscule by now. It's possible the raw software engineers never bothered to optimize their algorithms for the RD-1.
Image digitization has come a long way since 2002. ISO 800 is only one stop above the system's design maximum.
If the problem was amplified by the raw rendering algorithms. It will be interesting to see if more sophisticated software reduces the posterization. It would be nice if your raw software was ill-suited for the sensor performance because then all you have to do is find more suitable software.
Either way, the cause is using technology that can't handle those challenging conditions.
Image digitization has come a long way since 2002. ISO 800 is only one stop above the system's design maximum.
If the problem was amplified by the raw rendering algorithms. It will be interesting to see if more sophisticated software reduces the posterization. It would be nice if your raw software was ill-suited for the sensor performance because then all you have to do is find more suitable software.
Either way, the cause is using technology that can't handle those challenging conditions.