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Halloween with an M8


catwood

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This year I went to a friends halloween party dressed as a 1930's newspaper photographer (vest, fedora, & M8).

 

I took pictures all night with the M8 (50mm f2 lens) and today experimented with processing them as B&W in Lightroom. Still getting used to the B&W workflow, but I'm pretty pleased with the results.

 

Any suggestions on making the noise look better? The first few shots are especially muddy.

 

2009 Halloween

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In my opinion, they are all muddy. i'm sorry but these images are trashed. They look crappy, way to much noise. I'm guessing you shot these above 1250 ISO. I suggest, if you want to shoot in low light with the M8, get a noctilux 0.95 and shoot at lower ISOs.

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catwood:

 

I whipped together the same costume last night, same camera, for my Halloween shots. I set the camera to ISO 1250, lens at f2, 1/30th or 1/15th depending on light. If you let the camera set exposure on Auto, the metering will hunt for an exposure that leaves the shutter open trying to obtain a average brightness around daylight medium gray, and likely your night scenes are centered around a lower brightness value. So either set your exposure manually or dial in exposure compensation. Here's an image at 1250 in dim-ish room light...

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IMO you can't beat Alien Skin's Exposure plugin for photoshop if you want to recreate (in so far as you can) a film appearance to your shots. I tend to shoot at 160 ISO and let the software do it's job afterward. M8 -> Lightroom <--> Photoshop.

 

Here's an example where I used the plugin: Brendan Dawes on Flickr - Photo Sharing!

 

And the same photo without the plugin (used by Coudal for promotion) here.

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The biggest problem in these photos is that the photographer seems unaware of the light (or lack of it) and is not paying much attention to how it it falls on the subject. This is one of the fundamental principles of the medium (analog or digital) and it is perhaps better to train your eye rather than to expect a technological solution.

 

A good photographer will observe the critical moment of interaction between light and subject and make the exposure accordingly.

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I'm still exploring the low available light capabilities of my M8, but cfritze is right, dialing in the exposure manually (rather than running on aperture priority) will help a lot. Here's one of my witch and pumpkin!

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They all look like they were shot at ISO 2500 and underexposed which is the worst thing you can do using ISO 2500.

 

You really need a good noise reduction program. I've found Neat Image to be the best that I have tried with M8 files. But that program only works inside PS or as a stand alone program, Pro version, and not inside LR to my knowledge.

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shootist - you're absolutely right, way underexposed at iso 2500.

 

When you use Neat Image do you color correct & push exposure first in Lightroom, then export a jpg to denoise, or do you do an immediate DNG to jpg conversion, denoise, then play with the jpg in Lightroom?

 

Or is there any denoise software which works directly on the DNG?

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In my opinion, you would benefit much more from a good photography course than a noise reduction program. You need to work on focus technique, exposure determination, composition, post production and editing before you get into noise reduction. Either put some effort into improving your photography skills or get rid of the M8 and buy a point & shoot.

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The last thing you need to worry about in these images is noise - there's no detail in most of them and you've cranked them so high that the whites are blown to hell. Bin them.

 

There's good light, bad light, and no light at all - which is when you use a flash, or a camera that can handle 6400ISO (ie not a Leica), or just put your camera away and enjoy the party.

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Hey

Halloween with M8, i like that !!!

 

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M8 Summilux 35 Asph SF58

Nagui,

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It's much harder to get the feel I'm looking for with the TIFFs, but Noise Ninja does a really good job.

 

For instance, I love the exaggerated contrast on the top left image, but am unable to replicate it in the TIFF (way cleaner noise wise though).

 

And even though the bottom right image is still grainy as hell - I really like the coarseness in it.

 

Thanks to those who were actually supportive and helpful! I knew how bad the originals were, just didn't know where to turn to help them. I did throughly enjoyed the party despite the drinks wrecking my focus.

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In my opinion, you would benefit much more from a good photography course than a noise reduction program. You need to work on focus technique, exposure determination, composition, post production and editing before you get into noise reduction. Either put some effort into improving your photography skills or get rid of the M8 and buy a point & shoot.

 

Whilst agreeing with your statement for many parts, there's still no need to be rude. I apologize if that wasn't your intention but at least in my eyes that's the way it got through..

 

The exposure in the OP's pics was definately way out. Not a pro or "uber photographer" myself, but I'd say even a little "chimping" every now and then would help the OP. At least then you'll know what's going wrong... Other than that it just takes lots of practise and if interested/available then a course or two in photography could be usefull.

 

Still, saying "take some courses" doesn't always help, like fex in my case where there are no courses available.. not in this neck of the woods :(

 

For the OP: observe your images and other ppls (in this case halloween) images, listen to advices given on forums (even if some come across rude) and shoot a lot!

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Leica M8.2

Summicron 28

SF58

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