07-31-2018 04:03 AM
Hi Guys,
Im fairly new to photography and need some advise. All my pictures taken from my canon 650D (with any of my lenses 50mm, 55mm, 300mm) I keep on getting grainy (noise) pictures. I only take pictures on RAW mode, and set my ISO to max 400 when i use shooting modes like P, A+. And when I use M mode I set the ISO to 100. No matter what pic I take in what mode...all my pics are grainy.
Here are the info on this specific picture:
EF50mm f/1.8 ii
5184 x 3456
RAW
ISO 100 50 mm f /1.8 1/50 sec
And on this picture the noise is hectic on A+ (green box) mode and the ISO sets itself so high, regardless me setting it to max 400 should it use Auto mode
ISO6400 300mm f/5.6 1/125 sec RAW
07-31-2018 10:35 AM - edited 08-01-2018 05:38 PM
"...and set my ISO to max 400 when ..."
The A+ mode is for someone that doesn't know anything about cameras. It basically turns the Rebel into a P&S. You are telling the camera do everything and I'll pull the trigger. Your photos look normal to me. The bottom shows what ISO 6400 looks like. It will always be more prominent in the darker or shadow area. Even in ISO 400, noise will be present, to a much lesser degree of course, in the shadows and dark areas.
A lot of that can be corrected in post edit. Almost all post editors have a NR slider. I like LR and PS. "I only take pictures on RAW mode...", this is good. It allows to to do the max amount of editing.
08-01-2018 03:55 PM
Adding to what Ernie said, scene and automatic modes set the maximium Auto-ISO on 6400 by default that cannot be changed. Only the M, Av, Tv, & P modes allow you to use your own maximum Auto-ISO setting.
Andrew
08-01-2018 09:31 PM
BTW, if the camera isn’t moving (e.g. on a tripod) and the subject isn’t moving (e.g. the observatory), then you can use ISO 100 and let the shutter speed go as long as it needs to get that shot ... and you’ll have no noise (well... technically every image has noise... you’ll have no discernible noise to human eyes.)
08-02-2018 01:24 AM
Thanx allot for all your replies, is there then a better setting for night shots other then the built in Mode..... must i just play around with apperture, iso and my shutterspeed?
08-02-2018 05:16 AM
@Lostculture wrote:Thanx allot for all your replies, is there then a better setting for night shots other then the built in Mode..... must i just play around with apperture, iso and my shutterspeed?
What are you photographing at night? I use a tripod for taking landscape shots at night.
The above was a 25 second exposure at ISO-100.
08-02-2018 05:26 AM
Thanx so much...So the trick is a tripod.....im into stars and the moon so im just struggeling at getting it right. BUT learned much the last few days with rateher staying in M mode and setting everything myself.
08-02-2018 05:32 AM
@Lostculture wrote:Thanx so much...So the trick is a tripod.....im into stars and the moon so im just struggeling at getting it right. BUT learned much the last few days with rateher staying in M mode and setting everything myself.
The shot of the bridge was taken in Av mode. The camera calculated the shutter speed.
BTW, quality tripods are not made of plastic, have detachable interchangeable heads, and on average cost $200, and up.
08-02-2018 05:34 AM
Thanx will go and look at some available!
08-02-2018 05:44 AM
@Lostculture wrote:Thanx will go and look at some available!
I recommend Benro. They make high quality tripods and heads. But, the best part about Benro is that they also include a high quality case, not a bag, with nearly all of their tripods. If buy a ball head, make sure it has a friction adjustment.
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