TLDR : Ur sifu probably said stick to lowest ISO (100 or 50) if possible for less noise. Not true as it depends on where and when u shoot.
Using Higher ISO has less noise than lower ISO but darker due to shutter speed, and if u in try to lower shutter speed to compensate light, Ur frame will not be sharp.
Sekian terima kasih
This post has been edited by RT8081: May 27 2025, 12:10 PM
Looks like this guy is making beginners more confused.
Comparing low vs high ISO as same shutter speed, then of course the low ISO picture will be darker. Then increase brightness digitally to show more noise and say lower ISO more noise.
Try to shoot picture at correct exposure with low ISO and also with high ISO, meaning the low ISO one with longer exposure compare to the high ISO one. This will give both picture with same brightness. Then magnify the picture to see which one is grainier. I can bet the the one with high ISO will have more noise.
Your statement is only valid looking at one perspective.
Looks like this guy is making beginners more confused.
Comparing low vs high ISO as same shutter speed, then of course the low ISO picture will be darker. Then increase brightness digitally to show more noise and say lower ISO more noise.
Try to shoot picture at correct exposure with low ISO and also with high ISO, meaning the low ISO one with longer exposure compare to the high ISO one. This will give both picture with same brightness. Then magnify the picture to see which one is grainier. I can bet the the one with high ISO will have more noise.
Your statement is only valid looking at one perspective.
Correct la, i did said depends on location and when u shoot lol
Indoor and evening shot where light is dimmer or less light, it is ok to crank the ISO but compensate with right aperture and shutter speed. Some juniors i met so afraid to crank iso higher than 3600 because worried will be too noisy, so they ended taking darker shot and post process it
This post has been edited by RT8081: May 27 2025, 02:30 PM
Looks like this guy is making beginners more confused.
Comparing low vs high ISO as same shutter speed, then of course the low ISO picture will be darker. Then increase brightness digitally to show more noise and say lower ISO more noise.
Try to shoot picture at correct exposure with low ISO and also with high ISO, meaning the low ISO one with longer exposure compare to the high ISO one. This will give both picture with same brightness. Then magnify the picture to see which one is grainier. I can bet the the one with high ISO will have more noise.
Your statement is only valid looking at one perspective.
Anything for view count these days. Obviously, you could use higher ISO, it just depends on situation. People who stick to 50-100 guideline just tend to stay safe and don't like to do much of tests or trial. But to say lower ISO produces noisy photo compared to higher ISO is just misleading.
This post has been edited by whyamiblack: May 27 2025, 02:26 PM
Anything for view count these days. Obviously, you could use higher ISO, it just depends on situation. People who stick to 50-100 guideline just tend to stay safe and don't like to do much of tests or trial. But to say lower ISO produces noisy photo compared to higher ISO is just misleading.
He already shown u a sample, go and watch it lol adui
Everything is interrelated in photography. Faster lenses just means lenses with wider aperture capability than most lenses but that will reduce depth of field (focus zone).