High ISO Monochrom Pics

Timmyjoe

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Would anyone be interested in posting a pic from their Leica (original) Monochrom, that was shot above ISO 6400 (like ISO 8000 or ISO 10,000)? I keep hearing that the noise in the images looks like film grain, but from the images I have seen on the web (on sites like Steve Huff's), I think the noise looks like noise.

I figured if anyone has come up with a way to make the noise look like film grain, it would be one of you folks.

Thanks.

Best,
-Tim
 
Hey Tim this is a test shot I did some time back. 10,000 ISO original MM
L10065362_zpsb5cbb8c9.jpg
 
Sweeeeett Jeff! Thank you. Really nice work.

Were those taken with "regular" Leica glass like my 50 Summicron, or the exotics like Noctilux and 50 cron APO?
 
Timmy, the first was taken with an f1 Noctilux. Second with a 35 Summilux ASPH (ver 1, non-FLE). Third and fourth with a 50 Summicron APO.

The Noctilux gives an extra stop (over a Lux), of course, along with its unique signature. But beyond that it doesn't affect grain or noise in an image. And the 50 Cron APO, while a superlative lens, doesn't improve the last two images over what you would have seen had I mounted my non-APO 50 Cron, imho.

I think all Leica lenses are pretty exotic!
 
Very nice.

If I might ask, what is your post processing workflow? Are you using Silver Effects Pro, Lightroom, Aperture, Photoshop, . . . ?
 
CS6. To me it is more like the way I would work in a darkroom. Never warmed up to LR or SE. Both SE and LR came with the MM. Just never liked working in either. Just personal preference and I get exactly what I am looking for from each image.

I start with converting from DNG to tiff. I usually adjust contrast, (MM files are usually a little flat and dark. So much stuff in those shadows.) density and other basic adjustments in raw converter before I save as a tiff. I always save the tiffs in a separate folder from the DNGs. I always keep the raw/dng files the way I would negatives.

I then fine tune everything in CS6. I sometimes use quick mask to bring up or bring down specific areas. Fine tune contrast and density in CS6. On the images I really like I will then make a print and make final adjustments after judging the print.

I hope this helped.
 
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