Pegasus_Thrust
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Hi, This question has probably been asked a few times but I thought it worth another ask.
I've just done a christening for a friend in a church where the vicar asked that no flash be used and unfortunately it wasn't the brightest of churches particularly from the areas of the building I was allowed to shoot from.
I was using a D3 and a Nikon 50mm 1.4 at 2.8fstop (and on occasion a sigma 70-200 OS 2.8 & 2.8) at around 1600 iso with shutter at around 100th. The photos aren't bad but they could be better.
Yes I could boost the iso but this will only increase noise, I could lower the shutter speed but then I risk blur and I could dial it down to 1.4 but when shooting at a bit of distance I am a little apprehensive of using such a short depth of field for fear of the wrong thing being in focus etc. and I don't want to be snapping away like a mad man trying to get it right in during a religious ceremony etc.
Is there anything else I can do in future to improve this?.... either from a technical or method POV- any help would be appreciated
I've just done a christening for a friend in a church where the vicar asked that no flash be used and unfortunately it wasn't the brightest of churches particularly from the areas of the building I was allowed to shoot from.
I was using a D3 and a Nikon 50mm 1.4 at 2.8fstop (and on occasion a sigma 70-200 OS 2.8 & 2.8) at around 1600 iso with shutter at around 100th. The photos aren't bad but they could be better.
Yes I could boost the iso but this will only increase noise, I could lower the shutter speed but then I risk blur and I could dial it down to 1.4 but when shooting at a bit of distance I am a little apprehensive of using such a short depth of field for fear of the wrong thing being in focus etc. and I don't want to be snapping away like a mad man trying to get it right in during a religious ceremony etc.
Is there anything else I can do in future to improve this?.... either from a technical or method POV- any help would be appreciated
the noise usually manifests in the dark areas, where pixel peeping photographers will spot it, but the client will be looking at the B&G and won't even notice. (The collorary to this is don't cock up the exposure - underexposed then recovered in PP is the worst possible combo for noise).