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FORUMS General Gear Talk Flash and Studio Lighting 
Thread started 02 Mar 2007 (Friday) 19:51
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ISO?

 
teeny
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Mar 02, 2007 19:51 |  #1

Hi, I am new to photography, still learning. I have indoor lighting equipment and was wondering what you set your Iso to when your doing indoor portrait with a light system? By the way, I am using a Canon digital Rebel XT.




  
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raven7
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Mar 02, 2007 20:08 |  #2

I normaly use ISO 100 with my lighting equipment.




  
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bieber
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Mar 02, 2007 20:08 |  #3

Depends. If you want a really wide aperture for extreme depth of field, you might want to turn it up substantially. Otherwise, I'd try to stick to 400 or below (200 would probably be a good balance, if the lights are reasonably powerful) to avoid noise.


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teeny
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Mar 02, 2007 20:14 as a reply to  @ bieber's post |  #4

Thanks for the quick replies. I have 2 alien bees 800's for my lighting.

Teeny:)




  
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TMR ­ Design
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Mar 02, 2007 20:48 as a reply to  @ teeny's post |  #5

It doesn't matter which lights you are using. You want to use low ISO's for best performance and low noise. In my home studio I shoot at ISO 100 almost exclusively and when I go out with my camera I try to work at as low an ISO as possible but I do crank it up when I have to, and as long as I am getting great exposures the noise is low.


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Curtis ­ N
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Mar 03, 2007 01:30 |  #6

bieber wrote in post #2804906 (external link)
Depends. If you want a really wide aperture for extreme depth of field, you might want to turn it up substantially. Otherwise, I'd try to stick to 400 or below (200 would probably be a good balance, if the lights are reasonably powerful) to avoid noise.

I think you meant a narrow aperture for extreme depth of field.


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krazziecliff
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Mar 03, 2007 01:34 |  #7

Maybe he means extreme, meaning really shallow....so wide would be the correct term to use.




  
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SkipD
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Mar 03, 2007 03:19 |  #8

krazziecliff wrote in post #2806164 (external link)
Maybe he means extreme, meaning really shallow....so wide would be the correct term to use.

...... but you would lower the ISO so that you could use a wider aperture.


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schulmat
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Mar 12, 2007 13:57 |  #9

I am taking pictures indoors in a theatre an I cannot use a flash...What should I have for ISO? 1600 Should I have my aperture at its widest opening?




  
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Curtis ­ N
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Mar 12, 2007 14:08 |  #10

Hi Schulmat, welcome to POTN!

schulmat wrote in post #2858889 (external link)
I am taking pictures indoors in a theatre an I cannot use a flash...What should I have for ISO? 1600 Should I have my aperture at its widest opening?

Depends on the lens, but 1600 is a good place to start, with the lens wide-open in Av mode. If you're using a fast prime like a 50mm f/1.4 you might be able to use ISO 800 or even ISO 400 if the light is really good. Use whatever ISO setting you need to get a decent shutter speed. I use ISO 3200 quite a bit with a 70-200 f/2.8 since I need a faster shutter speed with the longer focal length.


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ISO?
FORUMS General Gear Talk Flash and Studio Lighting 
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