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Blue-footed Booby - Soaring #42356
05/10/16 11:13 AM
05/10/16 11:13 AM
Joined: Jun 2005
Columbus, Ohio
Scott Flaherty Offline OP
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Scott Flaherty  Offline OP
Tracker

Joined: Jun 2005
Columbus, Ohio
Nikon D800, Nikon AF-S 80-400mm VR II, 400mm, f/13, 1/2000, ISO 2000
Galapagos Islands, Ecuador (2016)



Scott Flaherty
www.clanoflaherty.com
Re: Blue-footed Booby - Soaring [Re: Scott Flaherty] #42358
05/10/16 06:04 PM
05/10/16 06:04 PM
Joined: Feb 2005
Manhattan, New York, New York
James Morrissey Offline
I
James Morrissey  Offline
I
Carpal Tunnel

Joined: Feb 2005
Manhattan, New York, New York
Wow! ISO 2000...I still don't normally go over ISO 200 if I can avoid it. How do you find the noise in the full size image? Looks super clean cropped down.

James

Re: Blue-footed Booby - Soaring [Re: James Morrissey] #42359
05/10/16 11:53 PM
05/10/16 11:53 PM
Joined: Jun 2005
Columbus, Ohio
Scott Flaherty Offline OP
Tracker
Scott Flaherty  Offline OP
Tracker

Joined: Jun 2005
Columbus, Ohio
The noise is not is not that bad. Especially if you expose to the right and are not trying to pull details out of shadows.


Scott Flaherty
www.clanoflaherty.com
Re: Blue-footed Booby - Soaring [Re: Scott Flaherty] #42360
05/12/16 07:19 AM
05/12/16 07:19 AM
Joined: Feb 2005
Manhattan, New York, New York
James Morrissey Offline
I
James Morrissey  Offline
I
Carpal Tunnel

Joined: Feb 2005
Manhattan, New York, New York
Thanks, Scott. I was wondering about that. May I ask what you are doing with the images? ie how many are you printing? What do you make when you see them at proof size (I proof at 12x18).

Cheers,
James

Re: Blue-footed Booby - Soaring [Re: James Morrissey] #42361
05/13/16 06:17 AM
05/13/16 06:17 AM
Joined: Jun 2005
Columbus, Ohio
Scott Flaherty Offline OP
Tracker
Scott Flaherty  Offline OP
Tracker

Joined: Jun 2005
Columbus, Ohio
I make proofs at about the same size and I tend to see less noise when print than I do on the computer. I also, when sharpening, do selective sharpening. That being, I sharpen the whole image and then mask it all out. I then paint the sharpening effect back onto the subject or what ever else I want sharpened. I usually don't want to sharpen blurred out backgrounds or skies. I sometimes do light sharpening on interesting cloud formations. With an emphasis on "light sharpening".


Scott Flaherty
www.clanoflaherty.com

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