These are taken with the Sigma 180 Macro using SB800 With Lightsphere at ISO 1000.
The first is a half crop and the second is a full shot. The noise was cleaned up with Neatimage plugin in Photoshop CS.
1/160s @ f/18

1/200s @ f/18

ISO 1000Moderators: Greg B, Nnnnsic, Geoff, Glen, gstark, Moderators
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ISO 1000After some advice from a few of the friendly folk here on the forum I thought I would FORCE myself to move away from ISO 200.
These are taken with the Sigma 180 Macro using SB800 With Lightsphere at ISO 1000. The first is a half crop and the second is a full shot. The noise was cleaned up with Neatimage plugin in Photoshop CS. 1/160s @ f/18 ![]() 1/200s @ f/18 ![]() Cheers
Mark ![]() http://www.trekaboutphotography.com He who dies with the most lenses wins...
Now that lens is starting to show it's worth. Very nice Mark.
"The good thing about meditation is that it makes doing nothing respectable"
D3 - http://www.oneputtphotographics.com
great......... I want that lens......... soon
Cheers ....bp....
Difference between a good street photographer and a great street photographer.... Removing objects that do not belong... happy for the comments, but .....Please DO NOT edit my image..... http://bigpix.smugmug.com Forever changing
he will need a good Canon A3 printer....... I am sure you can help....... Cheers ....bp....
Difference between a good street photographer and a great street photographer.... Removing objects that do not belong... happy for the comments, but .....Please DO NOT edit my image..... http://bigpix.smugmug.com Forever changing
Slider - I trust your attempt to go that high in ISO was so you could get some DOF?? I note you still had some spare room with speed and could have kept to 800 or less. There are some parts where the noise reduction looks a bit funny in the first photo. The shots themselves were great - awesome close-ups.
Regards, Paul Vandenberg
D7000 (D70S retired) - 18-70mm, 50mm F1.8, 35mm F2, Sigma 70-300mm
Great work Mark. See, ISO can be your friend - if you let it
![]() I'd be interested to see that shot again, only with the SB800 and ISO200. The SB800 is one magnificent piece of lighting equipment.... How much NR did you use in NeatImage ? Here's a tip that may be of some use - I often duplicate the background layer, then perform the NR on the copied layer. From here, you can play with the opacity so you can "dial the NR back", so to speak... OR you can tweak the settings before hitting the "apply" button.... I find my way easier (for me anyway) ![]() Dave
Nikon D7000 | 18-105 VR Lens | Nikon 50 1.8G | Sigma 70-300 APO II Super Macro | Tokina 11-16 AT-X | Nikon SB-800 | Lowepro Mini Trekker AWII Photography = Compromise
really like the detail in the eyes of this one.
you can see the little hexagons now. I noticed that the eyes were a tad hot previous to these images. I am assuming that the lightsphere diffusing the flash has produced this. Were your previous efforts using the lightsphere also?? Steve check out my image gallery @
http://photography.avkomp.com/gallery3
As an addition to that... When using a seperate layer it is also possible to use layer masks with different opacities. That way you can eliminate the background noise completely in OOF areas where it doesn't matter if you loose some detail... then in the more detailed parts of the image you can either use no noise reduction or just a limited amount (using opacity in the mask) to get the desired nose/detail level. Paul http://www.australiandigitalphotography.com
Living in poverty due to my addiction to NIKON... Is there a clinic that can help me?
No problem, Here is the original untouched apart from crop. ![]() Thanks for all the comments and tips folks. I will have to get more familiar with layers and how to manipulate them ![]() Cheers
Mark ![]() http://www.trekaboutphotography.com He who dies with the most lenses wins...
WOW Mark this is great, very very well done.
D3,D2x,D70,18-70 kit lens,Sigma 70-200mm F2.8EX HSM,Nikon AF-I 300m F2.8, TC20E 2X
80-400VR,SB800,Vosonic X Drive,VP6210 40 http://www.oz-images.com
just comparing the image before and after neat image.
Is hard to imagine that they are the same image!! Still trying to come to terms with PP in general. I wonder if you could step thru the steps you took to get from the noisy one up to the finished article?? Steve check out my image gallery @
http://photography.avkomp.com/gallery3
WOW Mark - bloody brilliant - the detail in the crop is amazing!!!!
I'm going to stop taking shots of dragonflies now - you are the king ![]() Rel Dodging and burning are steps to take care of mistakes God made in establishing tonal relationships! -Ansel Adams
http://www.redbubble.com/people/blacknstormy
OK I just went through the process again to make sure of the steps. Here you go 1. Adjusted exposure -1/2 stop 2. Bumped saturation up +10 ![]() 3. Cropped ![]() 4. Ran Neat Image - just let it do it thing automatically ![]() 5. Selectively enhanced the hue, brightness and more saturation on the yellow parts of the insect body. ![]() 6. Still wasn't happy with noise so I ran Neat Image again ![]() 7. Ran USM 200/.5/0 to enhance the wing structure ![]() 8.Ran Double Matt Frame action which resizes for web posting ![]() Cheers
Mark ![]() http://www.trekaboutphotography.com He who dies with the most lenses wins...
These are great Slider. Just be careful as Neatimage will reduce detail. While it might not be possible for insects with translucent wings, but for birds I do tend to select the background and feather it and then run a more aggresive noise reduction than what I would on the subject.
Darryl (aka Kipper)
Nikon D200
Slider. I really appreciate that and you taking time out to share! You have done well and should also be a spokesman for NeatImage ![]()
Amazing stuff Mark. I also am surprised at the quality of the high ISO image but that aside the images are clean, crisp, well composed and clearly demonstrative of great technique. Your last set also shows good application of PP skills. You and the lens are one.
![]() cheer marco
thanks for that slider
It was even more useful showing the intermediate stages of the process. It still amazes me the power we all have on our PCs these days, with software (and knowhow of course) to turn stuff like the original noisy image to something great. Steve check out my image gallery @
http://photography.avkomp.com/gallery3
Mark - Love the shot, but really appreciate the great step by step of how you got to the finished product.
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