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- Name
- Alan
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I've recently been getting rather irritated by the current move away from ISO 100 let alone 50 by some manufacturers with ISO 160 or 200 now appearing as the base ISO. My issue is that a higher base ISO leads to more use of ND's particularly if you like shooting with wide apertures and especially when a higher base ISO is coupled with a max shutter speed of 1/4000 sec, or even less. I find using ND's a pain as they need to be on for one shot and then off for another if they cause the shutter speed to fall too much or the ISO to rise too much, so all in all I'd rather not use them.
Recently when out with my G1 (base ISO 100, max shutter speed 1/4000) and a f1.7 lens 22 shots out of a total of 76 couldn't have been taken with the settings I wanted with a camera with a base ISO of 200 and a max shutter speed of 1/4000 without blowing large parts of the image. 6 were at ISO 100 and 1/4000 sec.
In my film days of course I had no choice as I didn't process my own images so I couldn't expose for the highlights and try and boost the shadows I just had to accept that in some shots I'd blow my highlights. With digital I obviously have more options. These days I expose for the highlights and boost the shadows or I intentionally let some areas blow if doing so makes the image look more like what I saw by eye.
However, I've recently been viewing blogs by Leica and Fuji X camera users and many contain shots with large areas of blown highlights. This may be a deliberate decision and style or it may just be that some people just don't care if the highlights blow.
I'm not going to provide links but what I will say is that the blogs and articles I've been looking at are not by complete amateurs like me, they're by the great and the good that we can all easily access on line. I can't say if their highlights are blown deliberately as that's their style, they may well be.
The next time I head off out I'm going to shoot normally to retain the highlights or to intentionally let some blow for a natural looking image and I'm also going to shoot a second shot letting large areas blow... just to see if I like the result.
So, what do you do?
Do you always try to retain the highlights?
Do you do as I do and let some blow for a natural looking image?
Do you blow large areas deliberately?
Or maybe you're not bothered about blowing highlights and just shoot for a perfect exposure on your subject?
Nothing is "right" of course, it's an art and what's right for one subject may not be right for another... I just wondered what other people do.
Recently when out with my G1 (base ISO 100, max shutter speed 1/4000) and a f1.7 lens 22 shots out of a total of 76 couldn't have been taken with the settings I wanted with a camera with a base ISO of 200 and a max shutter speed of 1/4000 without blowing large parts of the image. 6 were at ISO 100 and 1/4000 sec.
In my film days of course I had no choice as I didn't process my own images so I couldn't expose for the highlights and try and boost the shadows I just had to accept that in some shots I'd blow my highlights. With digital I obviously have more options. These days I expose for the highlights and boost the shadows or I intentionally let some areas blow if doing so makes the image look more like what I saw by eye.
However, I've recently been viewing blogs by Leica and Fuji X camera users and many contain shots with large areas of blown highlights. This may be a deliberate decision and style or it may just be that some people just don't care if the highlights blow.
I'm not going to provide links but what I will say is that the blogs and articles I've been looking at are not by complete amateurs like me, they're by the great and the good that we can all easily access on line. I can't say if their highlights are blown deliberately as that's their style, they may well be.
The next time I head off out I'm going to shoot normally to retain the highlights or to intentionally let some blow for a natural looking image and I'm also going to shoot a second shot letting large areas blow... just to see if I like the result.
So, what do you do?
Do you always try to retain the highlights?
Do you do as I do and let some blow for a natural looking image?
Do you blow large areas deliberately?
Or maybe you're not bothered about blowing highlights and just shoot for a perfect exposure on your subject?
Nothing is "right" of course, it's an art and what's right for one subject may not be right for another... I just wondered what other people do.








