Bart_van_der_Wolf
pro member
Hi Folks,
Interesting experiment: http://vimeo.com/14821961
The postprocesing is a bit crude, and some of the end result is not how I would like to see it, but the potential is there.
It's nice to know that the CMOS technology already allows to extract images with multiple "ISO" setiings from a single capture, although it means moving more data at the same time, so that might require more processing power to combine with high FPS settings.
In-camera high scene contrast image improvement is already available in some (P/S) still cameras (e.g. iContrast for Canon, active D-Lighting for Nikon ), although I don't know if it is anything more than tone adjustment. For video it's only a matter of time ...
Cheers,
Bart
Interesting experiment: http://vimeo.com/14821961
The postprocesing is a bit crude, and some of the end result is not how I would like to see it, but the potential is there.
It's nice to know that the CMOS technology already allows to extract images with multiple "ISO" setiings from a single capture, although it means moving more data at the same time, so that might require more processing power to combine with high FPS settings.
In-camera high scene contrast image improvement is already available in some (P/S) still cameras (e.g. iContrast for Canon, active D-Lighting for Nikon ), although I don't know if it is anything more than tone adjustment. For video it's only a matter of time ...
Cheers,
Bart