Sunday 17 October 2010

More ISO testing

or, what a photographer does when stuck in a hotel room on a rainy Sunday.

I should really have done this test many years ago, but now at least I have Lightroom 3 with its better noise reduction, and it really is better. The below is with the default noise reduction settings. Except for the first in each line, all pictures are taken with ETTR - since the motif doesn't have any real highlights, I could do one stop over the suggested exposure. The first one is (comparably) pushed. All photos taken on tripod with mirror lockup and remote delayed release. It's nice to have a tripod where you can mount the camera on one end and the thing to shoot at the other, and just move the tripod for better lighting. Speaking of lighting, it's unfortunately still tungsten, but at least it's the same light source all the way through.



I'm actually pretty impressed with this. There's some noise visible in the flat area, but it's pretty film-like and not very distracting. There is hardly any loss of detail in the focused area. The last row does seem to be a little brighter, but that could just be due to the resolution of the exposure display - the difference in lighting was done by moving the tripod further away from the light until the light meter showed a two stop decrease in light, but that can vary by 1/3 of a stop. A proper fixed light or filters would make it more accurate.

An interesting thing is that the "correctly" exposed images are a little deeper in the darks (may be hard to see on this crop). Like in the previous test, it is due to the black clipping being off in the "pulled" ones. So when doing ETTR, one should really adjust the black point to match, in this case move it up a little in the right-most 5 columns. Doubling it gives about the same effect as having normal exposure, but then I frequently move the black point up a bit just for the extra punch.

The bottom line: With LR3, I am not afraid of high ISO anymore. At the next nice evening, I shall go find myself a nice detailed scene with some sky and dark details and stuff to try a more realistic test. Studio tests only tell so much of the story, after all.

P.S. Stupid Chrome and its lack of color management.

An experiment with ISO and pushing

A long time ago, somebody introduced me to the concept of "pushing", from the film days where you couldn't just change ISO at the press of a button. Pushing means to deliberately under-expose the shot and then over-develop to compensate, giving a way to fake higher ISO. In the digital world high ISO is of course the standard by now, but can you also push digital? Of course you can, and it's even easier. Just underexpose and draw the 'exposure' slider up in your favorite photo program. The question that has long plagued me is: under what circumstances, if any is software pushing better than increasing ISO? The only 'circumstances' that really matter are the exposure times. It is well known that high ISO noise is worse in longer exposures than in shorter exposures, but is there a point where the noise from pushing is less than the noise from higher ISO? My initial guess is no, that there are advantages to "pushing early" that get lost if you wait on the pushing until the picture is shot, but we shall see.

To test this, I set of a simple test shot with my trusty if dated Canon 350D and the very trusty and not at all dated EF-S 60mm macro lens. Using various light sources, I took repeated shots of the same scene (camera tripod mounted, using remote release, mirror lockup and delay, just to be sure), starting with a correct (ETTR) exposure at ISO 1600 and the lowering the ISO while keeping shutter speed and aperture the same. I set the aperture to f/5.6, enough to have a reasonable DOF.

Due to the lack of a proper studio setup, I had to make do with an assortment of lights of decreasing intensity:
Flash aimed at the ceiling (1/160 sec), close-by tungsten lamp (1/25 sec), ceiling light (.5 sec), and a bounced tungsten lamp (4 sec, black-frame subtraction kicked in only on ISO 1600). This unfortunately makes it difficult to compare the effects at the different light levels, however the effect at different ISOs is what I'm after, and here are the results:

Results of ISO test
And this shows plainly why pushing isn't a commonly used method in digital photography. The noise is not the problem, in fact noise reduction (this is with LR3 default noise reduction) is so good now that you can hardly tell the difference between ISO 100 and ISO 1600 even on an old camera like mine (see below). The problem is posterization. In the top 1 stop (approximately), you have half the information in the picture. The next stop down has half of the rest, etc. So for each stop of underexposure, the amount of data is halved. With 12 bits per channel, you normally have 4096 levels total, of which half are in the top stop. So if the top of the usable dynamic range is 2-3 stops above medium exposure (which other experiments have shown to be the case for this camera), the midtones (say one stop to each side of medium exposure) have between 1500 and 750 tonal levels. That's plenty to hold a nice tone curve. Underexpose by a stop, and you have between 750 and 375, still a fair amount. Underexposed by 3 stops you have around 200-100 levels, which is not a lot.

And that's just the midtones. Consider the shadow areas - say from 1 stop below medium exposure and down. Here you have (again depending on where the top of the dynamic range lies) between 250 and 500 levels, again with half in the top 1 stop. This is already not a lot. The third stop below medium exposure has around 100 levels. With three stops of pushing, that drops to 12 levels. But here's the kicker: To remove the worst noise and to give some more punch, it's common to clip the lowest few levels, known as 'black clipping' or 'black level'. In the case of LR, this is done before exposure adjustment, so when the exposure is pulled up several steps, the black at the bottom is pulled far into the shadows and in the most extreme cases into the midtones. The clipping works well at removing noise, there is almost none, but removes even more of the precious few levels at the bottom, and makes the darks much darker. The result is very obvious in the image above: the darks get darker and start having major color flaws.

So what if we skip the black clipping?[1] Then we have something that makes more sense from a sensor point of view. All levels of pushing end up looking roughly the same at a large level, the darks are approximately the same darks, but now you can see the noise being pulled up, and how. Here are some 100% crops of details:





Voilá, the noise appears. Already at two stops pushing, there are noticable color errors. At 4 stops pushing, it is a mess of color noise, more than the otherwise pretty good noise reducer in LR3 can handle. The difference at one stop pushing is really hard to tell, though, even when flipping back and forth between the two. So it *is* possible to push digital, but you have to go against the normal workflow and you don't really gain anything.

What surprises me most is just how good ISO 1600 actually is with LR3. I've always tried to keep at 400 at the very most, but this gives me hope that ISO 1600 is actually useful. See some details for yourself:




Mind you, these were both taken with flash, I will have to do another test to see how various ISOs handle various levels of light when pulled through LR3. I have to say, though, I am hard pressed to see the difference between the two.

It's definitely much better than I expected. Gives me hope for my li'l photocapture box. And for my next test, I will have a more stable setup:)

[1] Which you can do on a Canon RAW file. I am given to understand that Nikon actually applies the black clipping to the raw data, leaving you without this option.

Friday 16 July 2010

Old lenses

Took a trip into a local second-hand electronics store for a new CD player today (got a nice Denon, almost exactly the same as we broke after 20 years of service), and looked at a couple old lenses he had standing around while I was there. Nothing directly Canon-compatible, but some that could be interesting to adapt, or are just interesting:

Cosmicar Television zoom 22-66mm f/1.8 - apparently a C mount, made for 18mm video cameras, not big enough for EOS, but could work with Pentax K.

Dixi 135mm f/2.8 - not found on Google at all!

Mamiya/Sekor SX 55mm f/1.8 - M42 mount, so not useable for my tilt/shift ideas, but apparently quite good. May have to get this.

Danubia 500mm f/8 (72mm thread version) - T2 mount, supposedly good quality for the price. And it would be fun to have just for the sheer size of it (it's loooong!)

Also, since I'm looking for a better flash:

Tumax 320 TFZ flash unit - uncertain voltage, and looks a little cheap. I'd better go for the Strobist special if I want to upgrade.

Unless I can find something interesting about the Dixi somewhere, I may spring for the Mamiya and Danubia. They are both mountable with a simple adapter.

Monday 7 June 2010

Printing: the beginning

A while back, I had promised my DW prints of my 5 best landscape photos so that she could do some fiber magic with them. For one reason or another, I didn't get around to it until today, where I brought out the only printer I have been able to afford so far: A Canon Selphy CP 760 portable postcard printer (not that I couldn't have gotten a bigger one, but there are priorities). It's small, prints only 10x15 cm, and uses a lot of ink and expensive paper, but it's a start. Later I'll get something that can do beautiful 33 cm wide panoramas and all.

At first print, my pictures came out very dark, much darker than they seemed on-screen. A quick bit of browsing revealed that a few brave souls had made printer profiles for the Selphy line, at least some of them. From this page, I downloaded the generic profile and the 720 profile and tried them out. The 720 was a bit better, but the colors still kinda muted. The generic profile, however, is actually really close to what I see on the monitor, with vivid colors and a pretty good feel to it. Makes me hopeful for home printing. I'll have to print the same pictures at my favorite print shop and compare.

This picture shows the difference, the left-most being with no profile, the middle with the '720 profile, and the right-most one with the generic Selphy profile. And before you say anything about overly saturated greens and Velvia disease, the early spring forest is actually that green in Denmark. I am in fact rather impressed that this little dude can reproduce it so well.

Sunday 16 May 2010

POTD 16/5 2010

"Cap" ©2008 Lars Clausen
Buy this photo at RedBubble.com
An old one, but a good one. This was the one that really opened my eyes to how much better my macro lens is.

No more POTD for at least a week, as we're going off to Samsø. I hope to bring back beautiful shots, but I don't know how much time I'll have to myself to shoot.

Thursday 13 May 2010

Focal length statistics

A nice little plug-in called data plot from Jeffrey Friedl confirmed what I suspected: My primes have a much larger percentage of keepers than my zooms.


All my pictures come out with the following distribution of focal length:



This graph mostly shows that while my SLR was new and I took pictures of everything that moved, I only had the 18-125 (28-200 equiv.). Thus the big clump at the bottom and the spike at 200 - I like tele shots. My two primes fall into the 71-89 and 90-108 mm range, hence extra many there. I hardly ever use my tele lenses at the outermost 1/4 except by having them "all racked out". One could say that that means I need more tele, but I think there'd always be a spike at the end as I tend to go for the limits. There's also a nice spike at the wide-angle side. 27% prime lens usage overall.

Let's take a look at which focal lengths/lenses give the most keepers. I rate my images with stars in the following manner:
1 star - unfocused, random, could probably be deleted.
2 stars - technically OK, compositionally not horrible. Can be used externally in a pinch.
3 stars - a good photo, can reasonably be used externally.
4 stars - a really good photo, likely to be used if part of an assignment.
5 stars - my very best. Will be used in portfolios, exhibits, on-line galleries etc.

1 star:



One confusing point here is that the 50 and 60 mms (incorrectly) got lumped into one group. A lot of the bulk in non-tele area has been removed, or possibly I just haven't rated so many of the earlier ones. 30% primes - various experiments have put a lot of prime pictures in here.

2 stars:


More of the wide-to-middle range feature here, probably travel snapshots that turned out ok. 21% primes - they get dwarfed by the snapshotting.

3 stars:



A smaller part of the good ones are in the middle area, but the primes and far ends hold their ground. The spike at 200 (far end of my 18-125) is shrinking, seems like that's pushing it too far. 25% primes, they're starting to pull away from the pack.

4 stars:


Up in the really good pictures area, I have a whopping 40% primes. There's still a spike at 200mm, but the medium range area and longest zoom have collapsed significantly.

5 stars:



Again, the primes hold a disproportionately large part (38%) of the "greatest hits". Probably because I tend to use the primes for critical things (assignments) and be more careful when I use them (macro). But to a certain degree also just because they (especially the 60mm) are just better. The remainder are fairly randomly scattered, with a spike at 200mm still, but not a very pronounced amount at 18mm - that lens is pretty weak there, and not wide-angle enough to be really impressive. The spike at 131-148 is curious: It's neither the near nor far end of any of my lenses, nor a prime. Maybe it's a sign that I really do need to get the 85 f/1.2 when I have DKK 10000+ available (though if Ken Rockwell is right that "For most people, even if someone was giving these away for free, the 85mm f/1.8 is a better lens because it focuses faster, focuses more easily, focuses closer, has less flare, weighs a lot less and is just as sharp," the 85mm f/1.8 at about DKK 2000 might be a good portrait lens for me. I just felt the lack of more light the last time I did portraits.

Wednesday 12 May 2010

POTD 12/5 2010

Another from my tulip shot yesterday. There's just something about my 60mm lens - it creates a far larger proportion of keepers than my other lenses.



Again done "in situ" with onboard flash bounced off a small foldable bounce.

POTD 11/5 2010

After a long absence, mostly due to me not shooting anything that I could put here (for reasons of quality and permissions), POTD is back with a sample from todays tulip shoot:



This is the result of the contorted setup shown in the previous post. Of course, I could have snipped the whole thing off and taken it inside for a studio shot, but I don't like to do that. Never the easy way for me... Besides, it would probably have caused a goodly amount of the dust to fall off.

What the picture of the setup doesn't show is how I light it: I bounce the flash right into my little fold-out bounce, using the white side. This gives a large enough lit area compared to the tiny subject that the light is appropriately rounded without being flat, and makes the details stand out clearly. Again, not the easiest way, particularly because the flash has a limited rotation ability. I look forward to having my own studio some day.

Moving the light a little bit around to illuminate the front of the left stem might have made it nicer, or it might have cut the drama down. I really like the yellow-on-deep-purple effect it has right now, it's one of my favorite color combinations.

Tuesday 11 May 2010

I heart my tripod (mostly)

As previously posted, I got a new tripod (Induro AX-214) to replace the too-long Manfrotto. While I haven't been able to go out and use it as much as one would hope for (having a sick wife meant having to pick up extra household chores), I'm giving it a work-out these days. I particularly like the ability to angle the center column. Here is todays setup:



In case it's hard to see, I'm shooting the petal-less tulip that's in front of the camera. I need to be pretty much parallel with the stem, hence the contortions.

I would have been hard-pressed to get this setup without serious damage to the other flowers, if at all. Other situations would simple have been impossible, such as placing the camera right next to a wall. I'm never getting another tripod without this feature.

The downside is that it takes a lot of turning on the two knobs on the column to get them to hold fast. There is no click or other indication of when it's fastened, the best you can do is tighten it a lot and re-check that it doesn't move. If you've been carefully positioning the camera in a cumbersome position, this can be a real bother. But part of it may just be that I should get used to placing the tripod in a place where I don't have to crawl over the tripod to get to the camera.

Sunday 21 February 2010

POTD 21/02 2010



"Snowed over"

"Fall" ©2007 Lars Clausen
Buy this photo at RedBubble.com
This is one where I had good use of my little remote control. Had to shake the branch then shoot immediately when a leaf fell off.

Saturday 20 February 2010

POTD 20/02 2010



"Flachmann's Grocery #2"

POTD 19/02 2010



"Flackmann's Grocery #1"

POTD has been suspended for a while due to appendicitis, lack of good screen and my picture harddisk being out of commission (I now have 2 backups rather than none. I feel a little safer:). I'm now ready to take more pictures and show them off.

This one would have been better off with a shift lens. Unfortunately, I forgot to apply my idea of how to emulate a shift lens, so I had to apply some perspective correction.