Stephen G
Well-known
For a given aperture/shutter combo, is it better to-
A) Shoot @ base iso 160 and apply a push in Lightroom (+1 stop)
B) Shoot @ iso 320
(this example is simple, 1stop, now extend this to iso 640, etc)
Theoretically I could see why these should be the same.
Either way, you are taking the RAW data off sensor, and applying gain to it, either in-camera, or in-postprocessing.
There are lots of small details that can throw it either way though.
Is the M8 applying noise reduction according to ISO used? So then you are not getting the same RAW data as had you shot @ base ISO.
Does LR have a better "gain algorithm" (if there is such a thing)?
Etc..
Does this impact resolution & noise differently?
I plan to try and test this, though the results will likely be open to interpretation.
My bias has been towards thinking these are either the same, in-computer was better, or that the difference was small enough not to matter. I shoot at base ISO and push later as needed. This has the added benefit of not accidently shooting daylight @ ISO 1600 after forgetting to change ISO back.
Or is the simple solution that I need a Noctilux?
A) Shoot @ base iso 160 and apply a push in Lightroom (+1 stop)
B) Shoot @ iso 320
(this example is simple, 1stop, now extend this to iso 640, etc)
Theoretically I could see why these should be the same.
Either way, you are taking the RAW data off sensor, and applying gain to it, either in-camera, or in-postprocessing.
There are lots of small details that can throw it either way though.
Is the M8 applying noise reduction according to ISO used? So then you are not getting the same RAW data as had you shot @ base ISO.
Does LR have a better "gain algorithm" (if there is such a thing)?
Etc..
Does this impact resolution & noise differently?
I plan to try and test this, though the results will likely be open to interpretation.
My bias has been towards thinking these are either the same, in-computer was better, or that the difference was small enough not to matter. I shoot at base ISO and push later as needed. This has the added benefit of not accidently shooting daylight @ ISO 1600 after forgetting to change ISO back.
Or is the simple solution that I need a Noctilux?







