I've always tried to stay away from the 'interpolated' ISO settings in the "L" and "H" ranges, preferring to stay in the native range. Comments on that, please?
I am normally a prime lens photographer particularly keen on the 17 and the 12 mm. But for ease of use and because this type of photography is quite soft due to the length of exposure I normally use a 1240 mm.
When doing long exposure pictures do you switch the noise reduction off ? If you are doing a 3min exposre you then have to wait a further 3mins for the noise reduction to work. Is this really necessary ?
I totally agree anything above F8 on the micro 4/3 system is synthetic and really only about reducing the aperture enough to get a long exposure. I find it F11 everything is in focus when shooting traditional images
Clear, concise, and I really like the images, thanks!
Brilliant! Nice and easy to follow instructions thank you!
Great video
Nice and easy .Thankyou.
Best explanation. Thanks.
I've always tried to stay away from the 'interpolated' ISO settings in the "L" and "H" ranges, preferring to stay in the native range. Comments on that, please?
Really great help. Can I ask what your lens is as I've only just moved to Olympus from Nikon? Cheers
I am normally a prime lens photographer particularly keen on the 17 and the 12 mm. But for ease of use and because this type of photography is quite soft due to the length of exposure I normally use a 1240 mm.
When doing long exposure pictures do you switch the noise reduction off ? If you are doing a 3min exposre you then have to wait a further 3mins for the noise reduction to work. Is this really necessary ?
you can to reduce the lag at the end, but I normally leave it on.
I normally leave it on, I find the noise reduction pretty good
Nice video, but f 22 is way too much, because of diffraction. Your shot become soft because of it.
I totally agree anything above F8 on the micro 4/3 system is synthetic and really only about reducing the aperture enough to get a long exposure. I find it F11 everything is in focus when shooting traditional images