Your shots have a nice atmosphere.
Bill Pearce
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chuck Norcutt" <chucknorcutt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Olympus Camera Discussion" <olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, October 20, 2009 6:13 PM
Subject: Re: [OM] [OT] new Canyon 1d Mk
>I can tell you that one has to learn to think differently when one has
> workable very high ISO available. A couple of weeks ago I attended the
> wedding of a friend's daughter which was held in a very large, old stone
> church. The ceilings were oak paneling about 40 feet up. I watched the
> two young women doing the photography and at first thought them to be
> nuts. They were shooting with Canon 5D Mk IIs, 24-70/2.8 IS lenses and
> 580EX II flash units. I could tell that the flash units were on and
> they appeared to be bouncing the flash off the 40 foot high dark
> ceiling. I thought they were crazy. No, more than crazy. Just plain
> nuts. Afterall, the light would hardly reach that 40 foot high ceiling
> let alone be reflected back.
>
> But crazy they were not. After the wedding I spoke to them and
> discovered that they were shooting at ISO 4,000 and very deliberately
> bouncing off the high ceiling. I don't know what shutter speeds they
> were using but, given the IS lenses I would guess 1/15 to 1/30 second.
> I was so impressed I took my own camera back into the church as the
> people were filing out and took a couple of test shots and duplicated
> the conditions as best I could. The only lens I had with me was a
> Tamron 24-135/3.5-5.6. I took two test shots both at ISO 3200, 1/100
> second at f/3.5. The only difference between them is that one has by
> Canon 540EZ flash bounced at full power off the ceiling. I was amazed
> at how much additional light showed up. With their gear they could
> easily have been 2 stops ahead of me. Here are my samples:
> <http://www.chucknorcutt.com/High%20ISO%20bounce%20flash/index.htm> They
> are converted from raw just as they were shot. No exposure
> adjustments and not even any white balance adjustments to correct for
> the daylight setting. Adding 2 more stops and correct color balance
> would produce excellent images.
>
> I was impressed and realized that I was still mentally stuck with the
> capabilities of ISO 400 film. :-)
>
> Chuck Norcutt
>
>
> AS wrote:
>> What the heck would someone do with ISO 12,800 (extendable to ISO
>> 102,400)?
>>
>>
>>
> --
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