Archlich
Well-known
Pushing boundaries on these specialized cameras is a good thing, I see no good reason for it to "end" except maybe it would also bring an end to the "I don't need it" posts for every new camera release.
I better leave the astronomically high ISOs for the number supremacists...
What blows me away more than clean high ISO is the narrow view of folks who lack the imagination in how it can be used to great effect.
Bragging rights?
When you only go out to photograph in bright sunlight, I can see why they would think that. I'm still stuck on about ISO 6400 being the top I have to use. I can completely use more... I like to photograph at 1/500th at least generally speaking due to my own internal shake and having to react quickly bringing the camera to my eye. I'd gladly take another 2-3 stops of clean high ISO than what I have.
What blows me away more than clean high ISO is the narrow view of folks who lack the imagination in how it can be used to great effect.
Right, like the sequence of images I got of elk rutting in full moonlight that were still a bit blurred at ISO 20,000 with a 1.4 lens. That was with a Nikon Z6 by the way and while AF had a hard time responding, MF in using the EVF in that high setting proved revolutionary for me in hitting focus in that low of light.
What blows me away more than clean high ISO is the narrow view of folks who lack the imagination in how it can be used to great effect.
Right, like the sequence of images I got of elk rutting in full moonlight that were still a bit blurred at ISO 20,000 with a 1.4 lens. That was with a Nikon Z6 by the way and while AF had a hard time responding, MF in using the EVF in that high setting proved revolutionary for me in hitting focus in that low of light.
What blows me away more than clean high ISO is the narrow view of folks who lack the imagination in how it can be used to great effect.
How times change, before it was about megapixel numbers, now it's about ISO numbers?
Maybe I'm oldschool, but give me any ASA 100 film (which I'll develop around ASA 64-80 most of the time anyways so it's not a fixed number) and a tripod and I'm happy with that for decades to come.
I better leave the astronomically high ISOs for the number supremacists...
Someone needs to formulate a "new moon f/64 rule"!