First time I've seen this - can anyone tell me what causes it?
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tantalus1662 Member 131 posts Joined Apr 2006 Location: Peterborough, UK More info | Apr 14, 2006 08:58 | #1 First time I've seen this - can anyone tell me what causes it?
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bewaretheblur Member 195 posts Joined Mar 2006 Location: Lake Placid, NY More info | Apr 14, 2006 10:10 | #2 either you took a picture of a dog on tv, or you used a plaid scarf as a filter. Bodies: 1d mkIII, 30D, 20D,
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Radtech1 Everlasting Gobstopper 6,455 posts Likes: 38 Joined Jun 2003 Location: Trantor More info | Apr 14, 2006 11:16 | #3 It looks somewhat like the "Horizontal Banding" issue that plagues come camera/lense/setting combinations. Unfortunately this looks like both horizontal and vertical. Try the same shot (with or without the dog, of course) under controlled conditions and see if you can duplicate the error. Especially try it in aperture priority instead of shutter priority. .
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Atomic79 Member 214 posts Likes: 1 Joined Oct 2005 Location: Santa Clarita, CA USA More info | Apr 14, 2006 12:38 | #4 I have seen the same thing when I have really under exposed a RAW file. I shoot mostly RAW+jpeg and the jpeg would be completely black and RAW is trying to get anything out of it. No matter how slow the film, Spirit always stands still long enough for the photographer It has chosen. Minor White
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lostdoggy King Duffus 4,787 posts Joined Aug 2004 Location: Queens, NY More info | Apr 14, 2006 12:48 | #5 I think Atomic has a point. It looks like it was also shot with very high ISO.
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cforslund Member 85 posts Joined Oct 2005 Location: Denver, CO More info | This is absolutly noise caused by an under exposed image as Atomic79 mentioned and not a banding issue. I have seen this exact same issue on an number of occasions with shots in low light situations. Chris
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Radtech1 Everlasting Gobstopper 6,455 posts Likes: 38 Joined Jun 2003 Location: Trantor More info | Atomic79 wrote: I have seen the same thing when I have really under exposed a RAW file. I shoot mostly RAW+jpeg and the jpeg would be completely black and RAW is trying to get anything out of it. There is no evidence that that is the case here. When a RAW is pushed that far, color veracity and contrast is sacrificed. For example, I would have expected the white (beige, actually) behind the dog to have been completely blown, especially where the fur of his right ear and cheek overlay the beige. That did not happen here. Also, the brightness and contrast subtleties on his face and eyes are appropriate. Nothing blown. Again, if it were pushed, don't you think the highlights would have been blown? lostdoggy wrote: I think Atomic has a point. It looks like it was also shot with very high ISO. Exactly just how "very high" is 100? cforslund wrote: This is absolutly noise caused by an under exposed image as Atomic79 mentioned and not a banding issue. I have seen this exact same issue on an number of occasions with shots in low light situations. Boy, I am glad that we have that absolutly [Sic] figured out. But still, I wonder how can you call this "an under exposed image" - any more exposure and the highlights would have been blown. Does this much noise really seem appropriate at 100 iso? .
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cforslund Member 85 posts Joined Oct 2005 Location: Denver, CO More info | Radtech1 wrote: There is no evidence that that is the case here. When a RAW is pushed that far, color veracity and contrast is sacrificed. For example, I would have expected the white (beige, actually) behind the dog to have been completely blown, especially where the fur of his right ear and cheek overlay the beige. That did not happen here. Also, the brightness and contrast subtleties on his face and eyes are appropriate. Nothing blown. Again, if it were pushed, don't you think the highlights would have been blown? Exactly just how "very high" is 100? Rad No need to get "pissy". It is my opinion that this is not a banding issue. Although the ISO is set to 100 it does not mean that you will never see noise. The fact is that I have seen exact same issue lots of times with under exposed images. This is not an equipment problem. (that is my final opinion and answer. I am sorry if my opinion offended you in any way! But hey we are all entitled to our opinions aren't we. Chris
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TeeWhy "Monkey's uncle" 10,596 posts Likes: 5 Joined Feb 2006 Location: Pasadena, CA More info | Apr 14, 2006 16:40 | #9 doesn't look like banding, It seems more like noise. Gallery: http://tomyi.smugmug.com/
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The image posted was not processed one little bit - RAW straight from the camera converted into JPEG for posting. The banding was present on the LCD screen on the camera before being downloaded.
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jfrancho Cream of the Crop 6,341 posts Joined Feb 2005 More info | Apr 14, 2006 19:31 | #11 It looks like an underexposed raw image that was opened in ACR with auto settings on. I bet that if you open the image up in ACR, and use Ctrl-U to turn off the auto settings, you'll see a much darker image. I've seen this myself, and it has been documented recently in another thread. The problem stems from not using a high enough ISO setting - the commonality that most images that look like this are low light and low ISO.
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Having thought about it....... I think it is noise. Like I say, I probably forgot to switch WB setting after being on sunny. I was under shade and the dog was sitting just inside a garage so even darker. Will still experiment tomorrow as on a steep learning curve at the moment!!
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jfrancho Cream of the Crop 6,341 posts Joined Feb 2005 More info | Apr 14, 2006 19:41 | #13 WB has nothing to do with it. Look at the Exposure slider.
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TeeWhy "Monkey's uncle" 10,596 posts Likes: 5 Joined Feb 2006 Location: Pasadena, CA More info | Apr 14, 2006 20:11 | #14 Can you send me the RAW file to review? This is peaking my curiosity Gallery: http://tomyi.smugmug.com/
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Titus213 Cream of the Crop More info | Apr 14, 2006 20:18 | #15 Is it possible to get to a jpeg from raw without processing? This is exactly what my grossly underexposed images look like when I try to recover them. Either that or it was shot thru some kind of screen door. Dave
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