OK, I assume that Getty clean up high iso stuff as what I have seen lately, Getty must clean them, they cant not....
Anyon know what they use.
Is it bespoke stuff, kinda arm and costs a leg?
Ta.
bristolpete Senior Member 264 posts Likes: 1 Joined Oct 2006 Location: Bristol. UK. More info | Dec 29, 2006 05:42 | #1 OK, I assume that Getty clean up high iso stuff as what I have seen lately, Getty must clean them, they cant not.... http://www.titanimages.co.uk/
LOG IN TO REPLY |
neil_r Cream of the Proverbial Crop Landscape and Cityscape Photographer 2006 18,065 posts Likes: 10 Joined Jan 2003 Location: The middle of the UK More info | Dec 29, 2006 05:49 | #2 a translation for us thickies pleae? Neil - © NHR Photography
LOG IN TO REPLY |
bristolpete THREAD STARTER Senior Member 264 posts Likes: 1 Joined Oct 2006 Location: Bristol. UK. More info | Dec 29, 2006 05:54 | #3 neil_r wrote in post #2458709 a translation for us thickies pleae? Just how they clean high ISO noise tbh....? http://www.titanimages.co.uk/
LOG IN TO REPLY |
KIPAX Goldmember 1,261 posts Likes: 33 Joined Jan 2006 Location: Accrington, England More info | Dec 29, 2006 06:09 | #4 AFAIK Getty dont have access to anything we dont.. the plastic look is from over noise reduction. In my tenth year as a Full time Sports Photographer.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
gsgary Goldmember 1,283 posts Joined Dec 2005 Location: Chesterfield,UK More info | I have found shooting on manual i get a lot less noise even for a 1Dmk1 but use Noise Ninja this shot is iso3200 with a bit of nn don't think it looks too plastic
LOG IN TO REPLY |
bristolpete THREAD STARTER Senior Member 264 posts Likes: 1 Joined Oct 2006 Location: Bristol. UK. More info | Dec 29, 2006 12:13 | #6 gsgary wrote in post #2459981 I have found shooting on manual i get a lot less noise even for a 1Dmk1 but use Noise Ninja this shot is iso3200 with a bit of nn don't think it looks too plastic ![]() Yeah, nice. The thing about noiseware is once the image is in print in a newspaper you would not know its there but to me, makes people look like Data from Star Trek! http://www.titanimages.co.uk/
LOG IN TO REPLY |
gsgary Goldmember 1,283 posts Joined Dec 2005 Location: Chesterfield,UK More info | I wouldn't know only had about 2 in print
LOG IN TO REPLY |
phylet Senior Member 501 posts Joined Feb 2006 Location: Leicester - UK More info | Dec 29, 2006 14:27 | #8 Noise ninja is good if you use it fairly low powerd, got to comprimise between noise and plastic. Canon EOS 1D MkII, Sigma 10-20 F4-5.6, Sigma 24-70 F2.8, Sigma 105mm Macro F2.8, Sigma Super 500 Flash
LOG IN TO REPLY |
grego Cream of the Crop 8,819 posts Likes: 2 Joined May 2005 Location: UCLA More info | Dec 29, 2006 17:18 | #9 You can use noiseware but you don't want to overdo it like that one picture. Go UCLA
LOG IN TO REPLY |
LMP Goldmember 1,108 posts Joined Jul 2005 More info | Dec 29, 2006 19:34 | #10 Pete,
LOG IN TO REPLY |
gmen Goldmember 4,345 posts Joined Aug 2004 Location: Essex More info | Dec 30, 2006 17:44 | #11 marcatkins wrote in post #2461829 Pete, Having just looked at their site and the pics from the Birmingham v Luton game I cant see that they have done alot to them in all honesty. I wouldn't have thought that NR was part of their routine workflow. I'd agree... adding NR to the live workflow isn't usually practical. TGSPhoto Editorial Sports Photography
LOG IN TO REPLY |
muls Senior Member 445 posts Joined Dec 2005 Location: NJ More info | Dec 30, 2006 18:01 | #12 I use Noise Ninja in my workflow if needed. I have shot a lot of boxing with Al Bello from Getty Images, and he uses Noise Ninja on site as well when shooting. The photos in my current gallery (http://www.sportsshooter.com/members.html?id=1733 Ed Mulholland
LOG IN TO REPLY |
gmen Goldmember 4,345 posts Joined Aug 2004 Location: Essex More info | Dec 30, 2006 18:11 | #13 muls wrote in post #2465881 I use Noise Ninja in my workflow if needed. I have shot a lot of boxing with Al Bello from Getty Images, and he uses Noise Ninja on site as well when shooting. The photos in my current gallery (http://www.sportsshooter.com/members.html?id=1733 Ed I know where you're coming from Ed. There's certainly a fine line between the 'plastic' look and a 'natural' look. TGSPhoto Editorial Sports Photography
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Tall_Paul_2000 Senior Member 919 posts Joined Sep 2006 Location: North West, UK More info | Dec 30, 2006 18:13 | #14 muls wrote in post #2465881 I use Noise Ninja in my workflow if needed. I have shot a lot of boxing with Al Bello from Getty Images, and he uses Noise Ninja on site as well when shooting. The photos in my current gallery (http://www.sportsshooter.com/members.html?id=1733 Ed Ed, My Gear
LOG IN TO REPLY |
muls Senior Member 445 posts Joined Dec 2005 Location: NJ More info | I use it as a photoshop plugin, after applying Noise Ninja, you can go under the edit menu and you will see a choice 'Fade Noise Ninja', click on this and it will bring up a slider to adjust the opacity of the level allowing some noise back into the image to give it a more realistic/less plastic look... Ed Mulholland
LOG IN TO REPLY |
![]() | x 1600 |
| y 1600 |
| Log in Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!
|
| ||
| Latest registered member was a spammer, and banned as such! 2533 guests, 91 members online Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018 | |||