James Blonde
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 405
- Name
- Scott
- Edit My Images
- Yes
I've been looking at submitting some of my images to (micro)stock agencies as an experiment. In terms of the rejections, the feedback so far has been too generic for me to really get an idea what the problem with the images are, however I'm fairly certain that noise is probably one good reason some of the images have been rejected. One of the most interesting aspects of submitting stock images has been that I realised that I've rarely looked at my images at 100%! Basic I know! I've tended to edit the image at (say) 25%, remove blemishes and spots at 100% but not really inspect the image. I've fixed that now! But that's obviously why I've missed noise being a problem.
I'm using a D7100 (or a D90 IR converted) and shoot at ISO100 (200 on the D90). Noise shouldn't be so much of a problem (or so I'd think!) but does regularly appear, particularly in sunset and dusk shots (as I guess you'd expect). I'm using Google Color Efex / Silver Efex Sharpener Pro and Define in post processing. Whilst Define does have a positive effect on noise, it still doesn't seem enough for some of the resubmissions. Any better tools for noise reduction? Should I also be looking to reduce my image sizes rather than submitting at 100%? Is this a potential reason to consider a new, full frame, camera? Is there much I can do in camera, and in post processing, to avoid creating more noise? (I guess avoid sharpening!)
Ta!
I'm using a D7100 (or a D90 IR converted) and shoot at ISO100 (200 on the D90). Noise shouldn't be so much of a problem (or so I'd think!) but does regularly appear, particularly in sunset and dusk shots (as I guess you'd expect). I'm using Google Color Efex / Silver Efex Sharpener Pro and Define in post processing. Whilst Define does have a positive effect on noise, it still doesn't seem enough for some of the resubmissions. Any better tools for noise reduction? Should I also be looking to reduce my image sizes rather than submitting at 100%? Is this a potential reason to consider a new, full frame, camera? Is there much I can do in camera, and in post processing, to avoid creating more noise? (I guess avoid sharpening!)
Ta!