millermixing
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 22
- Name
- paul miller
- Edit My Images
- Yes
Ok guys and gals, heres a funny little problem I seem to have encountered that doesn't make immediate sense and I was wondering if anyone would be so gracious as to enlighten me once more!
THE KIT: I have a canon 20d shooting with a canon 50mm 1.8 Mk11 lens. I used Elinchrom D lites, set the camera to 1/60th at f8 and shot in my lounge with no ambient light, which has cream/white walls.
THE PROBLEM: On a few occasions the detail in the shadow areas is really lacking...so much so you can see blocks of information (a tiny bit similar to the JPEG compression effect) where it looks like the sensor has struggled to cope with rendering a subtle shift in tones from light to dark. This has occurred on some high contrast facial lighting on the dark side of the face and also on a black t-shirt that my model was wearing.
I thought it might be a problem with the sensor capturing pure black so I shot a frame at f8 in my kitchen with no lights on at all. The result was perfect black with no blocks of varying color (I spot scanned the image in photoshop). This doesn't make sense.
Maybe I had some lens flare on the sensor at the same time as taking the exposure and this overloaded the sensor so it couldn't capture the subtle, graduated tones on a few of the pictures? What do you reckon?
Cheers
Paul Miller
THE KIT: I have a canon 20d shooting with a canon 50mm 1.8 Mk11 lens. I used Elinchrom D lites, set the camera to 1/60th at f8 and shot in my lounge with no ambient light, which has cream/white walls.
THE PROBLEM: On a few occasions the detail in the shadow areas is really lacking...so much so you can see blocks of information (a tiny bit similar to the JPEG compression effect) where it looks like the sensor has struggled to cope with rendering a subtle shift in tones from light to dark. This has occurred on some high contrast facial lighting on the dark side of the face and also on a black t-shirt that my model was wearing.
I thought it might be a problem with the sensor capturing pure black so I shot a frame at f8 in my kitchen with no lights on at all. The result was perfect black with no blocks of varying color (I spot scanned the image in photoshop). This doesn't make sense.
Maybe I had some lens flare on the sensor at the same time as taking the exposure and this overloaded the sensor so it couldn't capture the subtle, graduated tones on a few of the pictures? What do you reckon?
Cheers
Paul Miller