The new D800 has been seen primarily as a studio and landscape model, but there are signs that it could be quite the all-rounder, capable of decent results at high ISO too. However, whenever high ISO comparisons are made, should we be comparing 100% crops, or should we be comparing prints, and is extra work required for the D800: are we comparing apples to apples?
Whenever I export a picture from Lightroom, I either specify print dimensions and select 300 dpi, specify the number of pixels along the long edge for computer displaying, or select a quality of jpeg (high, low, medium etc).
So in what I assume is a typical workflow, what would we do differently if moving from a lower resolution model to a D800? When people are saying (in the context of high iso pictures) the D800 image only looks as good/better if you down-sample, what is this extra step theyre having to perform? Why can't you take a picture in raw, edit as usual, and export a jpeg for printing, and that be it?
Whenever I export a picture from Lightroom, I either specify print dimensions and select 300 dpi, specify the number of pixels along the long edge for computer displaying, or select a quality of jpeg (high, low, medium etc).
So in what I assume is a typical workflow, what would we do differently if moving from a lower resolution model to a D800? When people are saying (in the context of high iso pictures) the D800 image only looks as good/better if you down-sample, what is this extra step theyre having to perform? Why can't you take a picture in raw, edit as usual, and export a jpeg for printing, and that be it?