Here's a few shots I took a while ago, compares two shots about 3 stops apart from each other. I thought I'd expose to the right and then pull down - this should reduce noise...right? Well the quality is excellent for all parts of the image - *apart* from the sky - where posterisation is evident. This was done in 16 bit mode in Adobe Camera Raw. I started off in 8 bit mode but that was horrendous and 16 bit mode certainly reduced a lot of the posterisation. But it's still evident. The more that the image has been pulled down, the more posterisation thats evident (if I had a shot that was only 1 stop over exposed, not two for example, there'd be more noise but less posterisation)
I was under the impression that exposing to the right should certainly reduce posterisation - as there are more bits of data that have been captured. Below are two shots - its obvious which one has been exposed to the right due to the lower noise - but to me, the shorter exposure shot whilst having more noise has a more pleasant graduation (not the stepped posterised transition of the pulled shot).
Any ideas of how to reduce this posterisation? After all, I'm doing this for picture quality, and I'd love smooth skies!
I was under the impression that exposing to the right should certainly reduce posterisation - as there are more bits of data that have been captured. Below are two shots - its obvious which one has been exposed to the right due to the lower noise - but to me, the shorter exposure shot whilst having more noise has a more pleasant graduation (not the stepped posterised transition of the pulled shot).
Any ideas of how to reduce this posterisation? After all, I'm doing this for picture quality, and I'd love smooth skies!