For those wanting quick recommendations: I would leave Low Noise Reduction On almost all the time, unless I went above 3200 ISO, then I would switch to Standard Noise Reduction. The amount of chromatic noise that Low removes I think is worth it, while still leaving a great amount of detail in your footage. Do you have any questions on filmmaking? Leave them down below!
Great video, just what I was looking for! Quick question, I dont really get the comparison shot at 12:50.. It shows 12800 super clean and crisp, and 800 below it all soft and noisy.. What is this image of? 12800 with no noise reduction and 800 at High noise reduction so it looks mushy? Please clarify..
The shot is of noise reduction off at 12800 top shot and 800 bottom shot. The softening might just be a focusing issue on my end. The shot below is slightly cleaner noise pattern when zoomed in. All this to show that the noise reduction isn’t even necessary often times. Hope this helps.
A lot of sports photographers deal with high ISO if they are shooting night games with poor lighting - like a typical high school soccer or football field. And many of us shoot jpeg to avoid editing raw photos - we take a lot of photos. I'm often above 10000 ISO and even often at 25600 ISO. I think I will try the standard setting for my R6 II. Thanks for the video!
Glad I could help. These were all in video mode and Clog-3 which is much noisier than shooting jpegs or normal video. So you’ll have better results than me. Cheers!
There is definitely less noise when using standard in low light. To help combat that, I usually expose low light footage a stop or two higher than normal, and bring it down in post.
@@baexlive6759 I use the histogram on the camera, and I will expose the image so that the histogram is either center for dark images. This usually is just me increasing the ISO to achieve the increased exposure.
For those wanting quick recommendations: I would leave Low Noise Reduction On almost all the time, unless I went above 3200 ISO, then I would switch to Standard Noise Reduction.
The amount of chromatic noise that Low removes I think is worth it, while still leaving a great amount of detail in your footage.
Do you have any questions on filmmaking? Leave them down below!
😅 0:10 😊
Great job testing this out. I know it took a lot of work and time to do it. I made sure to like and leave a comment to give my support.
Thanks friend, I appreciate the kind words and support :)
This was a time comsuming video to make and it was worth it friend. Very good content on NR on canon cameras
Thank you for the kind words
Great video man, appreciate the work! 👍👍
Im glad I could help!
Thanks for this analysis.
Glad I could help :)
Great video, just what I was looking for! Quick question, I dont really get the comparison shot at 12:50.. It shows 12800 super clean and crisp, and 800 below it all soft and noisy.. What is this image of? 12800 with no noise reduction and 800 at High noise reduction so it looks mushy? Please clarify..
The shot is of noise reduction off at 12800 top shot and 800 bottom shot. The softening might just be a focusing issue on my end. The shot below is slightly cleaner noise pattern when zoomed in.
All this to show that the noise reduction isn’t even necessary often times. Hope this helps.
A lot of sports photographers deal with high ISO if they are shooting night games with poor lighting - like a typical high school soccer or football field. And many of us shoot jpeg to avoid editing raw photos - we take a lot of photos. I'm often above 10000 ISO and even often at 25600 ISO. I think I will try the standard setting for my R6 II. Thanks for the video!
Glad I could help.
These were all in video mode and Clog-3 which is much noisier than shooting jpegs or normal video.
So you’ll have better results than me.
Cheers!
Thanks for this video. I have recently bought this camera and nose has been an issue in low light.
I’m glad I can help
Great Vid
Thank you
Is this for Clog or standard profiles?
Great point, this is Clog-3.
I run a similar test and the best results I got was, use regular picture profile for low light. not log.
There is definitely less noise when using standard in low light.
To help combat that, I usually expose low light footage a stop or two higher than normal, and bring it down in post.
@@BrunoPozo4Realhow do you expose +2 stops in camera?
@@baexlive6759 I use the histogram on the camera, and I will expose the image so that the histogram is either center for dark images. This usually is just me increasing the ISO to achieve the increased exposure.
Does it works on RAW or only JPEG?
Only Jpeg, raw files Don’t get affected by this noise reduction setting