• Members 976 posts
    May 11, 2023, 7:56 p.m.

    That's not what I said. First, I'm saying there are 4 independent variables, raising ISO doesn't mean any other variables are changed "in accordance".

  • Members 509 posts
    May 11, 2023, 7:59 p.m.

    Sometimes the speed limit is 20mph, sometimes it is 30mph. Where I live on the edge of London boroughs with different policies, it seems to swap between 20mph and 30mph every 10 yards...

  • Members 509 posts
    May 11, 2023, 8 p.m.

    Bob said that

  • Members 457 posts
    May 11, 2023, 8:02 p.m.

    You are using the ambiguous term "underexposure." In most usage, it means making the image look darker. By "underexposure," do you mean lowering exposure?
    Raising ISO may not mean lowering exposure, though sometimes you have to reduce the exposure to prevent clipping (when ISO is set too high).

    I assume you describe the following situation:
    a) widest aperture and slowest shutter speed are selected within acceptable boundaries.
    b) ETTR cannot be achieved because there is insufficient light, and you raise the ISO to make the image brighter without changing the exposure.

  • Members 509 posts
    May 11, 2023, 8:07 p.m.

    By underexpose/underexposure I mean any exposure which lets less light than ETTR onto the sensor. What the image looks like on the back of the camera is irrelevant, I adjust all that stuff in post.

    I have decided not to raise the ISO, just to accept the less than optimum exposure if the light is dim. Reason being that Jim has explained that the function of the ISO dial is not consistent between cameras and ISO settings. I use a lot of cameras, it's too much trouble to work which camera behaves in what way and when and try and remember all that. Jim says I'm probably not suffering more than about 1/3rd to 1/2 a stop read noise from leaving it set to base ISO as long as I stay within about 4 stops of ETTR, That's good enough for me, I probably underexpose all the time by accident/incompetence anyway. All gets lost in the wash.

  • Members 976 posts
    May 11, 2023, 8:41 p.m.

    In full manual mode one can control ISO, shutter speed, and aperture separately, that's what I meant.

    Thank you.

  • May 11, 2023, 8:44 p.m.

    That's the problem. Clear thinking depends on denoting different concepts with different words. I'm not 'an expert on the correct terminology' - I just know that if you muddle words and the words 'all mean the same thing to you' you'll never think clearly - simply because you're muddling different concepts and think that different things are all the same.

    This isn't 'physics and engineering language'. It's photographic language. Terms like 'exposure' and 'lightness; come from the vocabulary of photography. Most physicists and engineers who are not photographers wouldn't be familiar with them. There are plenty of glossaries, most threads like tis the definitions get given, disputed, argued about. The base problem these days is that most of the information resources from which photographers learn get the basics wrong.

    I'm just pointing out how confusing the terminology confuses thinking. Being 'tolerant' of confused terminology doesn't help clear up the confused thinking.

    Which 'ETTR' do you mean?

    Well, if you thought that 'ETTR' is 'correct', then that's a given that anything less is 'under', isn't it? Still I would say that ETTR is a means to an end, not an end in itself. Most ETTR techniques I have seen will not maximise exposure - if maximising exposure is what you're aiming at. And of course there are always constraints to how large an exposure you can have, so what about those? If the exposure you're calling 'ETTR' at base ISO causes you to get camera shake and insufficient DOF for your subject, is it still the 'correct exposure'? If it isn't, then a smaller exposure would be 'correct' in those circumstances, wouldn't it? And if raising the ISO caused less noise, that would be an improvement rather than 'lying to yourself', is it not?

    There are a few things that I think you've said that don't fit the reality. I pointed them out in earlier posts. So things that seem to me to be confused in your mental model are (at least)
    - the relationship between exposure and noise.
    - the role of maximum recorded exposure in DR.
    - the relationship between noise and DR.
    - the constraints on exposure.
    - the difference between the nature of the input and output of a camera.
    and several other things. As we discuss more, I can try to work out how I think these things are connected in the way you are thinking, but I can't see inside your head.

  • Members 509 posts
    May 11, 2023, 9:10 p.m.

    Ok, let's have a go at these.

    Noise

    1. Noise is unwanted erroneous data. Ideally, there would be no noise, but the camera adds some (various sources, bucketed under the convenient term "read noise"), and light has a random quantum nature we call "shot noise".

    2. Shot noise can't avoided, read noise can be controlled to a degree. Modern cameras have good control over read noise.

    3. There is always some noise present

    4. Noise isn't objectional if it is kept low compared to the desired data

    5. The best way of controlling noise is to get more light on the sensor (controlled by level of ambient light, shutter and aperture settings).

    6. ETTR i.e. allowing sufficient light on to the sensor to swamp the noise without letting so much in it saturates the sensor is one common technique used by photographers to minimise noise

    7. Boosting ISO does not get more light on the sensor, it merely makes the midtones less dark (careful avoidance of disputed terminology!)

  • May 11, 2023, 9:15 p.m.

    Both mischaracterisations. You're engaging in a very common (and ego based) fallacy which might be called "I'm a pro so I know." There are several problems with it. First, there's quite a few pros that don't know, so saying just that you're a pro doesn't prove anything. Second, it kind of assumes that you speak for all pros, and thus leads you to wrongly decide that anyone who disagrees with you can't be one. So far as Iliah goes, I've come to realise that he doesn't say anything without a great deal of thought. It's also a lot to do with learning style, as I said to Don B upthread somewhere. Different folks approach learning and its application to problem solving in different ways. Some take a trial and error approach, where they try different things, find out what works for them and adopt it. No problem with that. Others take a more model based approach - which is to try to understand how the system they are dealing with works then apply that knowledge to the problem they want to solve. In my experience those that adopt the second approach generally end up with better solutions more quickly, whilst those that take the first will often find good solutions, generally in a more time, depending whether you factor in the tie taken to understand how the system works or not.

  • Members 2306 posts
    May 11, 2023, 9:20 p.m.

    This is Jims article i copied and pasted ,but i shoot basically the same.

  • Members 240 posts
    May 11, 2023, 9:21 p.m.
    1. ETTR can still be considered when using auto ISO in ultra low light, because having set your shutter and aperture you can still go to halve your ISO by applying 1 stop +EV to the right, subject to not clipping the highlights.

    2. This approach will give you a bit more DR to play with in post for such challenging situations.

    3. My point 9. kinda equates to your point 7.

  • Members 509 posts
    May 11, 2023, 9:22 p.m.

    Role of maximum recorded exposure in DR.

    Not sure exactly what you mean by this, but:

    1. DR is measured between saturation and a noise floor (arbitrarily decided, there are various measures such as engineering DR, photographic DR) which put boundaries for acceptable noise at different levels

    2. The ideal exposure for maximum DR is ETTR - it gets the maximum amount of light on the sensor

    3. If you give less exposure that ETTR, noise becomes a greater proportion of the overall exposure and more visible

    4. Raising ISO sometimes (depending on camera) reduces the read noise component visible in the deepest shadows but overall noise is dominated by shot noise so it doesn't do a lot.

    5. As raising the ISO doesn't change the sensor sensitivity, it normally results in less light hitting the sensor - and thus more visible noise. Visible noise is one component in measuring DR, so raised ISO is usually associated with reduced DR. Raising ISO also raises values of highlights and drives them towards clipping so this could potentially reduce DR as well.

    NB

    I haven't addressed your other bullet points as I'm not sure what you mean by them.

  • Members 2306 posts
    May 11, 2023, 9:26 p.m.

    Your all good Jim ,i wish others would join the conversation with there experiences. this is not a battle but a good platform for others to enter
    with there own subjective or common views.

  • Members 240 posts
    May 11, 2023, 9:32 p.m.

    All I've said and backed up with examples of how to shoot in the real world is designed to help real world photographers.

    When challenged it basically comes down to Ilah eventually saying "you do know who I am don't you?" which is a change of strategy.

    That's because his first strategy of cherry picking bits of my posts to reply to (and out of context) wasn't working.

    And then Bob you come in in and try and be clever and turn it round like I'm trying to be some superior pro.

    Nice try but it doesn't wash.

    What's happening here is scientists trying to prove how clever they are, then trying to be even more smug with cherry picking selectively the bits they want to reply to.

    Then you pop up trying to be the ultimate cherry on top. But all you're doing is defending your scientist mates. Having probably not read the whole thread properly (in your defence).

    Sorry it doesn't wash.

  • May 11, 2023, 9:35 p.m.

    OK. I could quibble with some of that, but let's take that as a working definition, at least for now.

    Both can be controlled. Shot noise by controlling the number of photons incident on the sensor (which equates to exposure if we ignore sensor size). In the majority of cameras the ISO control offers some control over read noise, but not in a documented or standardised way - you need to investigate you camera to know how it works in this respect.

    Yes

    I find that to be so simplistic as to be unhelpful. In the best of all possible worlds, the best SNR is the highest one. How much or which type of noise is 'objectionable' is dependent on so many factors - usage - viewing size - characteristic of the noise - artistic intent - whether the consequences of reducing the noise are more objectionable - and on and on.

    That's the only way of increasing the shot noise SNR. It has no effect on read noise.

    That's not a definition of ETTR that I would subscribe to. As I said earlier, ETTR is a means to an end, not an end in itself. The end goal is to maximise exposure subject to your working and pictorial constraints. ETTR - that is increasing exposure until a displayed histogram shows that all the recorded exposures in the image are within the bounds of the histogram, but there is no free space 'to the right' - is one technique that can be used to achieve that goal, but there are others. One of the issues with ETTR is what the histogram actually represents. So far as I know, no present camera offers a raw histogram. There are hacks to try to get around that of various kinds, some more successful than others.

    Nor does it get less light on the sensor - so if the exposure is limited by working and pictorial constraints, boosting ISO is not an issue. And since on most cameras, at least over some of the ISO range, boosting ISO will reduce read noise, it's worthwhile in those cases.

    Theres a question worth asking pure ETTR advocates. If you've set the slowest shutter speed that you can whilst avoiding shake, and you've set the widest aperture that you can, which will give sufficient DOF, and the meter shows 'underexposed' at base ISO, what will you do?
    1. Take the photo at base ISO with that exposure?
    2. Increase exposure and risk shake or insufficient DOF?
    3. Increase the ISO?
    4. Decide not to take the photo?
    and why is your choice the right one?

  • Members 2306 posts
    May 11, 2023, 9:35 p.m.

    Yes it is . and its getting criticized because members think i wrote it . but you arnt, wonder why ? good experiment hey 😁

  • Members 2306 posts
    May 11, 2023, 9:37 p.m.

    oops 🤣

  • Members 2306 posts
    May 11, 2023, 9:43 p.m.

    Thanks mate, it took me a while to figure something was a miss. Im one of those that rarely reads an instruction manual 😁