Gonz wrote:

>> Does this mean that you don't get any advantage from shooting a higher iso 
>> rather than under exposing at a lower ISO?
>
>Not true.  Exposing at the right ISO will give you less noise at the darker 
>end.

No it won't. If the camera is "ISO Invariant" (and there are lists
available in the links below) you'll get *exactly the same* noise from
underexposing and compensating in post as you would from cranking up
the camera's ISO setting and shooting the correct exposure. This is
because, with these cameras, "turning up the ISO setting" does exactly
the same thing inside the camera.

https://medium.com/@simonfuhrmann/iso-invariance-in-digital-cameras-a-case-study-7080791b5e78
http://improvephotography.com/34818/iso-invariance/
http://www.dpreview.com/articles/7450523388/sony-alpha-7r-ii-real-world-iso-invariance-study

 
-
 
-- 
Mark Roberts - Photography & Multimedia
www.robertstech.com





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