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Landscapes in Cloudy Conditions

Manvir Randhawa

New member
Hi I was trying to take landscapes in cloudy conditions and the results were not very impressive. there was a lot of noise in the images. I used a Canon 7D with a canon 50mm f/1.8 lens to get the shot.

I'll really appreciate some help with the correct settings for future.....

Thanks
Manvir
 

charlie chipman

New member
It would help if we could see an example and if you let us know the settings that went along with it.

Noise can be caused a number of different ways, high iso, underexposure, post processing, sometime circumstances air/light quality makes a difference. Hard to speculate without seeing an example.

Welcome to the forum Manvir.
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Hi I was trying to take landscapes in cloudy conditions and the results were not very impressive. there was a lot of noise in the images. I used a Canon 7D with a canon 50mm f/1.8 lens to get the shot.
Hi Manvir,

Canon seems to be proud of the well packed new 7D. A lot of pixels on a small helicopter landing pad for photons! This means it will resolve the diffraction artifacts caused by time apertures less than about f8 or f11. However that will not cause noise. However if you do use a tiny aperture to get increase depth of field for landscapes, then you do risk cutting down the light so much that shadows are noisy. The way around that is to use a tripod. however, if the wind is moving branches, then that can introduce blur. You can go around that be increasing speed and ISO but then the noise increases. So everything has consequences.

So what to do?

Well do the best you can. That means use the lowest ISO setting in which you can use an f stop of say 5.6 wherein your DOF is reasonable and your shutter speed is fast enough for your needs. In reality, noise is unlikely to be the thing that ruins your picture. more important is the choice of scene and the time of day.

Show us the picture and we can try to give feedback that will be helpful to you.

Don't worry about a picture being technically perfect, just be concerned with seeing with your mind what the image might look like on paper. Hardly ever does a picture get spoiled after that.

Asher
 
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Wendy Thurman

New member
I've gotten unacceptable noise results on a Nikon D700 at ISO3200 when shooting into shadows, only to turn 90 degrees and get very acceptable results in the same room. Of course, the lighting had much to do with it. We should be aware of the reality that despite a manufacturers' claims, all things are not possible. Photography in this day and age is capable of incredible feats but it is not capable of the impossible. Digital imaging is a godsend but the limitations imposed by the days of film cannot be entirely discarded.

I love digital photography but the more I use it, the more I am drawn back to film.

Wendy
 
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