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- Name
- Dale.
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I wasn't sure where to put this one but I guess it's a gear question.
I've been using a little Canon M5 this last few months at my kingfishers. I have been staggered by the image quality, for what it is, it's way better than anything I ever got out of a 7D. That said, if I were to mess up the exposure, it would be noisy but I could live with that as it's a Canon crop sensor after all and also, if the exposure was pants, it was my bad and not the camera's fault.
This last week or so, I've got my kingfishers where I want them, in good light with a nice background and about 12 feet from the end of my lens. My goal has always been to reach a standard that you might expect from a paid hide and I think it's been getting close to that this week. I'd said to myself, if I ever achieve that, I would start using my 5Div, which I did last Sunday.
Kingfishers are difficult to expose for, the white bits on thier throats and side of the head are a pain, especially in bright light. I have been exposing to the right, it's second nature now, to get the most out of the sensor/files, which has meant I've been exposing for the midtones, which as it goes, is usually the kingfisher itself. This results in the white bits being close to blown in most cases. I can live with that though, as they are a small part of the image and a bit of trickery in PP can help.
I'd been exposing this way all afternoon on Sunday. The images looked great on the camera (apart from the white bits) and I left the site excited to see them on my PC. Settings on Sunday were generally f6.3, ISO 1000 and a shutter speed of around 1/1000/sec. The 5D shouldn't break sweat at ISO 1000.
I have noticed though that the background on most of the images is grainy. The background was generally darker than the kingfisher and perch, so technically, underexposed. I was disappointed to see the grain and sometimes, blockiness. I'm not blaming my cameras, I know what they can do but I think I am going wrong somewhere. Any PP also seems to make it worse and then it really gets quite bad if I upload them anywhere.
I'm at a loss, I can't do much more than ETTR and accept the almost blown whites (even if the histogram says I'm barely clipping them) and fix them later. The histogram has tones from left to right, just touching either end. It's the best compromise I can come up with.
Should I really expect grainy backgrounds from a 5D at ISO 1000 with, according to the histogram, a nailed exposure? Or is it something to do with my processing workflow, which is very basic to be fair, or a PC hardware issue.
Or am I taking too much notice?
Uploaded (RAW) file more or less straight out of camera.

I've been using a little Canon M5 this last few months at my kingfishers. I have been staggered by the image quality, for what it is, it's way better than anything I ever got out of a 7D. That said, if I were to mess up the exposure, it would be noisy but I could live with that as it's a Canon crop sensor after all and also, if the exposure was pants, it was my bad and not the camera's fault.
This last week or so, I've got my kingfishers where I want them, in good light with a nice background and about 12 feet from the end of my lens. My goal has always been to reach a standard that you might expect from a paid hide and I think it's been getting close to that this week. I'd said to myself, if I ever achieve that, I would start using my 5Div, which I did last Sunday.
Kingfishers are difficult to expose for, the white bits on thier throats and side of the head are a pain, especially in bright light. I have been exposing to the right, it's second nature now, to get the most out of the sensor/files, which has meant I've been exposing for the midtones, which as it goes, is usually the kingfisher itself. This results in the white bits being close to blown in most cases. I can live with that though, as they are a small part of the image and a bit of trickery in PP can help.
I'd been exposing this way all afternoon on Sunday. The images looked great on the camera (apart from the white bits) and I left the site excited to see them on my PC. Settings on Sunday were generally f6.3, ISO 1000 and a shutter speed of around 1/1000/sec. The 5D shouldn't break sweat at ISO 1000.
I have noticed though that the background on most of the images is grainy. The background was generally darker than the kingfisher and perch, so technically, underexposed. I was disappointed to see the grain and sometimes, blockiness. I'm not blaming my cameras, I know what they can do but I think I am going wrong somewhere. Any PP also seems to make it worse and then it really gets quite bad if I upload them anywhere.
I'm at a loss, I can't do much more than ETTR and accept the almost blown whites (even if the histogram says I'm barely clipping them) and fix them later. The histogram has tones from left to right, just touching either end. It's the best compromise I can come up with.
Should I really expect grainy backgrounds from a 5D at ISO 1000 with, according to the histogram, a nailed exposure? Or is it something to do with my processing workflow, which is very basic to be fair, or a PC hardware issue.
Or am I taking too much notice?
Uploaded (RAW) file more or less straight out of camera.

Last edited:



, even perched and still, it only takes a breath of wind to blur the feathers.