View Full Version : So not impressed.....
Kiddo
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 06:59
Last night was my sons grade 8 prom, he goes to high school next year... So they had a little formal dance and everyone got all dressed up and such.. I was so excited.... I finally got the chance to get some pictures of him and his girlfriend together....
Got home from work, got everything set up, checked the lighting, check my gear, did some test pictures.. Thought they looked alittle off cuz of the new lighting and I'm not use to it.....
So his girlfriend gets here, we shoot a bunch of photos in the studio and then go to head outside and get some more..... I noticed again that one of the pictures I took looked off, so I got them to just hang out for a bit and I checked my camera settings............ I had my camera set at an ISO of 1600!!!! What the hellllll............. :mad:>:( I was sure I changed it back to 100 when I changed my other settings..... So it was to late to reshoot and off to the school we went and I did get some really nice pictures outside here and at the school with them....
Has anyone else done that before???? I can't beleive that I did something as stupid as that.... I'm gonna try to see if I can fix them with photo shop but they are so blown, I don't think that I'm gonna be able to save them.....
Thanks for letting me vent.................
bucket772
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 07:45
Guilty.
Was shooting one of the new Police K-9 dogs at a open field. Gorgeous day. Little cold but otherwise bright and sunny. I was shooting the night before and had the ISO maxed out. I felt like a huge dumbass when I got home and got them into Lightroom. Lets just say that I check the ISO often now. Here is the link
http://sillydaddy.smugmug.com/gallery/4476457_Kda3x#263284244_8B3EJ
cytime
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 08:05
Yep but I always check my aperture and shutter speed in P mode and if they seem out of whack I quickly know its the ISO setting a foot again nothing like it being set to 3200. Also checking the histogram is your best friend it will tell you quickly if your exposure is on or way off if its way right or way left you have issues to solve.
Wilt
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 08:18
All of us have left wrong ISO dialed in, at different times. They key things you failed to do were to notice the camera's showing you issues with exposure...
like the flashing aperture value or
the flashing shutter speed value or
the histogram with pixels all at the right side of the graph
Learn to LOOK for the visual cues and you can take good exposures even at high ISO in the middle of a sunny day!!! The camera might need to use small apertures along with high shutter speeds, and the pictures might be 'grainy', but they would be well exposed...if you had noticed the indicators.
shutterfiend
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 09:02
All the time.
Never had this problem with film. ;)
Does the 1 series cameras come with ISO display in the viewfinder?
Edit: White balance is another common goof up for me.
lan
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 09:06
While I've been caught with this outside in daytime, I'd never get caught with this inside / in studio. In M mode and with flashes, it's hard not to notice your settings.
keegsmeister
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 09:16
You're definitely not the first mate! ;)
It rarely happens to me because I think i might have developed a good habit of checking when I switch to M mode. I usually take 1 to 2 shots, review it, then continue shooting. Sometimes when you thought you've changed the ISO, you've actually clicked the 'shoot' button which doesn't accept it as a formal change with the Rebel XT (I think that might be your problem). You actually need to use the navigation button instead. :) Hope the shoot went well though!
Double Negative
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 09:26
Does the 1 series cameras come with ISO display in the viewfinder?
As of the 1D2N, I believe, yes. I love having ISO in the viewfinder... Though I really try to keep it at 100. :p
bauerman
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 11:36
I have been guilty of this a number of times. This is why Canon needed to pull their heads out like 8 models ago and add ISO TO THE VIEWFINDER ON ALL DSLR's. Sheesh Canon - its just common sense that it would be helpful to have that there.
With Canon though - they add common sense items like this later on down the road and call them 'upgrades' or "great new features". Bleh.
OdiN1701
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 12:24
At least with my 40D...if I did manage to leave it in ISO 1600, the pictures would still be usable :)
randomlinh
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 15:10
guilty. one day recently.. I was thinking "why the hell is the camera using such a high shutter.. wtf.. it's not THAT sunny" I'm used to shooting indoors.. so I had my camera at iso 1600....
René Damkot
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 15:28
As of the 1D2N, I believe, yes.
As off the 1D classic ;)
Double Negative
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 15:31
As off the 1D classic ;)
Indeed, you're right! Didn't think it went back that far.
joedlh
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 15:34
Not only that, I shot an entire evening of a fund raiser with white balance set on tungsten from a previous shoot. Only I was using a flash! Lots of PP work on that one. Being reminded of one's fallibility grants one a healthy self-perception (unless it happens too often).
CanadianKitKat
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 15:34
Do you have Noise Ninja? If not, I'd highly suggest downloading it. It will go a long way in saving your images.
cdifoto
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 15:41
I've accidentally used a high ISO outdoors, but didn't blow my exposures. It just didn't dawn on me why my shutter speeds were so high at first.
Mike
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 18:24
I have done it a few times, the worst was the only time I have visited Cambridge. Like cdifoto I hadn't worked out why my shutter speeds were high!
Brian1cj
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 19:26
I am guilty of good ol' iso 1600...
I took a nice fall trip to Traverse City, MI (Lake Michigan) and shot the whole dang thing in 1600 with my XT. All my images were flat... a bit blown out... washed out. They are salvageable but I never printed any. This is the best I could do to fix them: http://www.capturedbybrian.com/photos/traversecity/
Double Negative
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 19:43
I don't think I've ever left the ISO mis-set (I hope not, it shows in the viewfinder, thankfully) but I have inadvertently changed exposure mode. On the 1D you use two fingers to change ISO (which I do without looking away from the viewfinder) but if you let loose on one button, the exposure mode changes - which is NOT shown in the viewfinder. Oops.
I've also forgotten to reset the EC and just plain missed it - which is sad, as it's in the viewfinder (no excuse there)... I'd chimp, and be like, WTF? Then realize I did it... Again. :D
Kiddo
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 20:15
Do you have Noise Ninja? If not, I'd highly suggest downloading it. It will go a long way in saving your images.
No I don't, but I do believe that I will download it...........
Kiddo
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 20:18
;) I'm very glad to see that I'm not alone in this!!!!!!!!!! :)
Mike R
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 21:10
Happened more times than I care to remember before I started to reset it before putting it back in the bag and double checking each time I use it.
yogestee
11th of June 2008 (Wed), 21:11
I've done that a few times but I've always had well exposed images..I always check my exposure reading before shooting..Did you?? Meter, compose, focus, shoot..That is the order of the day..
BTW,,,I can live with sharp well exposed "noisey" images but never with fuzzy out of whack clean images..
Kiddo
13th of June 2008 (Fri), 07:15
There's a sticky note on the inside of my camera bag now that says.....
CHECK ISO!!!!!!
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