Great tips bud, one of the things I wasn't too thrilled about the M50 was the noise in low-light. It's not terrible but it's not great either. Defiantly can work with it though.
Hi hello idk if you will see this comment but I’m learning the camera I have M50 MII with the kit lens 15 to 45mm I have the fps at 30 and shutter 60 then iso 100 and apature F3.5 the footage I take is indoors so when I add the footage to my PC to look at it, it’s very grainy and I can’t seem to find a video anywhere about this Grainy footage with low iso, is it a setting or lens issue?
Well I'm confused. Can you please help me out? I have my shutter speed around 60 then aperture at the lowest possible the. i set my iso around 100 and its all black! it's all black until its around a thousand. so, i have no choice but to use a thousands in my iso. I'm sooo confuse cause a lot of you people are saying if the aperture is at the lowest, it will allow light but when i set iso at lowest, its all black. why is this happening? im filming indoors with some little bit of light but not too dark. can you help me out?
Setting the iso to a low number (100) will make the camera less sensitive to light meaning it will take way more light to make your picture bright. From what I'm understanding, you set the shutter speed to 60 because you're shooting in 30fps, I'm assuming you're setting the aperture to the lowest to get the blurry background but then you have the iso set to 100. I can propose 2 solutions. Add more light to your image or turn up the ISO but will in turn add more image noise. You're right that the lower the aperture, the more light that will be let in (brighter image + blurry background) but then pairing that with a low iso (making the camera less sensitive to light) will make the image darker. That's why as you raise the iso to 1000 (making it more sensitive to light) the image is brighter again. You're on the right track! Since you're shooting indoors, maybe you just need more light. Shooting by a window or buying an external lights are my best guesses since I don't know how your setup is.
You get a heart if you can count how many times I pronounce "ISO" as "AI-ES-OH" 😂 How do you pronounce ISO??
hahahaha! Been there bro. Actually learned not too long ago from Gerald Undone that the correct way is "eye-so". Much easier than Bokeh!
Thank you, this was so useful! Been struggling with my M50 and the grain in videos but this was so helpful, thank you!
You're very welcome!
Omg, I've been trying to fix the noise on my new Canon M50 Mark II for the longest and you're the only video that has helped me!! Thank you!!
You're very welcome!
So excited to watch this!! Thank you so much for making it!!
thanks for requesting it! lmk if you have any more questions!
Been slowly getting to know my M50. The last shot I did was better than the last, but still noisey. I'll try your tips. Hopefully it'll help
Great tips bud, one of the things I wasn't too thrilled about the M50 was the noise in low-light. It's not terrible but it's not great either. Defiantly can work with it though.
Totally agree. I've been itching to try a new camera but the budget does not allow for it 😅
Bad man thank you for this video bro!
No problem!
Thank you for help. I should have read the manual or two...
Hi hello idk if you will see this comment but I’m learning the camera I have M50 MII with the kit lens 15 to 45mm
I have the fps at 30 and shutter 60 then iso 100 and apature F3.5 the footage I take is indoors so when I add the footage to my PC to look at it, it’s very grainy and I can’t seem to find a video anywhere about this
Grainy footage with low iso, is it a setting or lens issue?
thanks bro this was very helpful
Glad it helped
Very useful❤
Hey, what is your windows software suggestion for removing thoes grainy things in video?
adobe premiere or da vinci resolve would probably be your best bet
@@freeleymedia Thank you😊 🙏🏼
Thank you Bro❤️🙏
any time!
good bro
thx bro
Well I'm confused. Can you please help me out?
I have my shutter speed around 60 then aperture at the lowest possible the. i set my iso around 100 and its all black! it's all black until its around a thousand. so, i have no choice but to use a thousands in my iso. I'm sooo confuse cause a lot of you people are saying if the aperture is at the lowest, it will allow light but when i set iso at lowest, its all black. why is this happening? im filming indoors with some little bit of light but not too dark. can you help me out?
Setting the iso to a low number (100) will make the camera less sensitive to light meaning it will take way more light to make your picture bright. From what I'm understanding, you set the shutter speed to 60 because you're shooting in 30fps, I'm assuming you're setting the aperture to the lowest to get the blurry background but then you have the iso set to 100. I can propose 2 solutions. Add more light to your image or turn up the ISO but will in turn add more image noise.
You're right that the lower the aperture, the more light that will be let in (brighter image + blurry background) but then pairing that with a low iso (making the camera less sensitive to light) will make the image darker. That's why as you raise the iso to 1000 (making it more sensitive to light) the image is brighter again. You're on the right track! Since you're shooting indoors, maybe you just need more light. Shooting by a window or buying an external lights are my best guesses since I don't know how your setup is.