High ISOs on Small-Sensor Cameras, or “Why does my digital camera suck so badly in low light?”

DPReview has posted a typically excellent article explaining the various High-ISO/low-light modes found on compact digital cameras these days. It’s a must-read for anybody who’s looking for a digital point & shoot or who may be in the future.

The executive summary is that camera manufacturer marketing departments are dirty, dirty liars, and that these high-ISO modes either have so much image noise that you wouldn’t want to use them or (more likely) use such aggressive noise reduction that it will destroy any fine detail in your pictures. (Fuji seems to be something of an exception to this, and their cameras seem to be the ones to buy if you want to take pictures without a flash in low light.)

It’s frustrating because there’s a very simple, direct technical solution to the problem, and it’s to stop forcing more and more megapixels into cameras than the sensor technology will support, and focus on providing better pixels rather than just more. But as long as camera buyers keep focusing on that single number when comparing competing models the situation is unlikely to change. Given that the next two posts on DPReview are announcements of 12(!) megapixel compacts from Casio and Panasonic, I’m not optimistic.

Spring Cleaning, part 2

Oof. Busy week. I meant to post this earlier in the week, but it seems like I simply haven’t had a chance. Any rate, this is one that I processed for posting long ago, along with this one, in a post about the little Canon S330 digital that I used to carry around, but said post never materialized. At least I don’t think it did. Sorry if this is a double post. Man, I’m gettin’ old.

High Bridge

High Bridge

Spring Cleaning

Another month, another post… I’d write some sort of apology for the silence, but you’ve all heard it all before…

Anyway, I’ve been working on importing my photos into Lightroom and getting them organized there, partially in the hopes that it’ll be a lot faster in the future for me to get stuff posted on this blog after shooting it. In the process of reorganizing stuff on my hard drive, I’ve found a handful of photos that have “fallen behind the sofa” so to speak; stuff that I processed at some point but didn’t post for one reason or another. I should be posting a few of them over the next week or so while I get this Lightroom thing figured out.

Rainier #1

Rainier #1

First up is one that I did when Luke first sent me the photo in this post. I got to thinking, what if I took a super-clean, picture-postcard shot and “dirtied it up” in Photoshop? I ended up with what you see above. I never posted it, partially because it feels pretty derivative when compared to Luke’s shot, but also because after looking at it for a bit the effect feels pretty over-the-top to me. What do you think?