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View Full Version : Oly E-620 Low light shots Not working so well



nissanman
18-06-2010, 8:50pm
Hi guys,

So ive tried a few low light, night shots this afternoon.

Didnt turn out the best. After some help.

Gear:

Olympus E-620
Lens- Zuiko 14-42mm
2gb CF Card

Setup im trying:

Manual mode
F4.0
+0.7 (??)
3 (this is shutter speed but not sure what is it in x/xth ??)
ISO 1000



Here are the images:

http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a194/nissanman/DSLR%20Test%20images/Q6181424A1.jpg

http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a194/nissanman/DSLR%20Test%20images/Q6181546A1.jpg

http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a194/nissanman/DSLR%20Test%20images/Q6181553A1.jpg

Any help or critiquing is More than welcome.

As you can see the images are dull, blurry and even more blurry in some parts.

Im still reading the Olympus Book :)

Cheers,

J

piXelatedEmpire
18-06-2010, 9:08pm
I have the same camera (since January this year) and really enjoy it. Admittedly I don't do much night shooting. However, the issues you are experiencing with blur are due to your very slow shutter speed (which reads as 1/3) :eek:

Did you have IS turned on? Tripod/Monopod?

Scotty72
19-06-2010, 10:03am
Hoping not to touch off a war of words here :)

Agree with the above comment.

This is most likely due to the very slow shutter speed (assuming you are hand holding or have an el-cheapo tripod).

A shutter reading of 3 means 1/3 sec (way too slow for hand holding or on el-cheapo tripods)

The first two shots probably needs a bigger depth of field (bigger F:#) try 7-10 (more for #2) or something similar (depends on the focal length etc).

Also, at ISO 1000, you are seriously pushing the limits of the 4/3 sensor.

Does this mean throw the Oly away? Of course not but, get yourself a sturdy tripod, a remote trigger (even if a cheapy from flea-bay) and then try hard to understand the relationship between ISO, shutter speed and apperture on exposure (and also, the consequences of high ISO and what noise correction will do)

Good luck

Scotty

piXelatedEmpire
19-06-2010, 10:24am
Also, at ISO 1000, you are seriously pushing the limits of the 4/3 sensor.
I'd respectfully disagree, the E620 is one of the best 4/3rds sensors, and I've shot nice clean images up to ISO 1600 without too much hassle. Admittedly, not at night, however.

Scotty72
19-06-2010, 10:51am
I'd respectfully disagree, the E620 is one of the best 4/3rds sensors, and I've shot nice clean images up to ISO 1600 without too much hassle. Admittedly, not at night, however.


Can we agree then, that it would be best (regardless of sensor) to get a good tripod thus allowing the ISO to be dialled down, the shutter speed to be dailled up and a crisper image taken?

Scotty

nissanman
19-06-2010, 11:06am
Great help guys!
Thanks :)

Scotty72 - I think youve hit the nail on the head, thanks for helping out with my shutter speeds.

I found that when i went to a f10 etc it wouldn't pick up the light, so chucked ISO up, slowed shutter speed and got worse blur.

Ill keep at it and explore how perhaps exposure compensation may help... ? :)

Thanks to all.

Scotty72
19-06-2010, 12:54pm
Great help guys!
Thanks :)

Scotty72 - I think youve hit the nail on the head, thanks for helping out with my shutter speeds.

I found that when i went to a f10 etc it wouldn't pick up the light, so chucked ISO up, slowed shutter speed and got worse blur.

Ill keep at it and explore how perhaps exposure compensation may help... ? :)

Thanks to all.

If you are shooting in MANUAL mode then there is no exposure compensation.

What that is, is the camera (when in one of the priority modes) adjusting the other setting to either allow more / light onto the sensor. When in FULL AUTO, it will adjust both automatically.

Unless I'm missing something, you can't adjust exp comp (unless you are thinking of flash comp). Because, when you do the manual settings, YOU decide how much above or below level exposure you want.

Scotty

piXelatedEmpire
19-06-2010, 5:10pm
Can we agree then, that it would be best (regardless of sensor) to get a good tripod thus allowing the ISO to be dialled down, the shutter speed to be dailled up and a crisper image taken?
Sure, why not, think I might have mentioned similar in my first post ;)

peterb666
19-06-2010, 5:30pm
I do a lot of very long exposures with my E-P1 which uses the same sensors. A sturdy tripod, low ISO and long exposures are the key.

Unless you need to have short exposures, stick to ISO100 and ISO200. I do the occassional ISO400 but don't venture to ISO1600 at night unless I am doing hand-held work (which is very rare).

Also make sure you don't have continuous shooting turned on as that turns off noise processing.

Rosh
19-06-2010, 5:46pm
There is so much to rember with low light. The biggest thing is to turn of IS so the camera does not compensate.

Rosh
19-06-2010, 5:48pm
Oh i forgot to mention, if you have a remote use that or use self timer to take the shot. Then there will be no camera shake as you wont be depressing the camera button.

swifty
19-06-2010, 7:14pm
There's a few issues here. The blur may be due to one or combination of:
1. camera shake 2. subject movement 3. DOF.
To eliminate 1, you either need a faster shutter speed (and upping iso and/or wider aperture to compensate at the expense noise and DOF respectively), or a sturdier support (ie. good tripod).
2. To eliminate subject movement you need a faster shutter speed. In all 3 photos, there are leaves/branches that are very likely to have some movement during the exposure. The more movement, the faster the shutter speed you require. And the faster your shutter speed, the more you'll need to compensate your exposure with ISO and/or aperture.
3. To increase DOF, you need to use a smaller aperture, among things. But now you're letting in less light so you need to compensate by increasing ISO and/or lengthening the shutter speed.

As you can see, there's no hard and fast rule on the perfect setting. Doing one thing will affect something else. You just need to understand what each setting does and select your best compromise.
A quick note on exposure compensation. It biases the camera's meter but in manual mode, it will only indicate (usually in your viewfinder) where your exposure is based on current exposure settings. It will not compensate your settings automatically like in the auto and semi-auto modes eg. Program, Shutter and Aperture.

nissanman
20-06-2010, 7:11pm
I do a lot of very long exposures with my E-P1 which uses the same sensors. A sturdy tripod, low ISO and long exposures are the key.

Unless you need to have short exposures, stick to ISO100 and ISO200. I do the occassional ISO400 but don't venture to ISO1600 at night unless I am doing hand-held work (which is very rare).

Also make sure you don't have continuous shooting turned on as that turns off noise processing.

Thanks mate. Ive done a few more and there getting better :)


Oh i forgot to mention, if you have a remote use that or use self timer to take the shot. Then there will be no camera shake as you wont be depressing the camera button.

Yea i use a 2 sec delay, cheers :)


There's a few issues here. The blur may be due to one or combination of:
1. camera shake 2. subject movement 3. DOF.
To eliminate 1, you either need a faster shutter speed (and upping iso and/or wider aperture to compensate at the expense noise and DOF respectively), or a sturdier support (ie. good tripod).
2. To eliminate subject movement you need a faster shutter speed. In all 3 photos, there are leaves/branches that are very likely to have some movement during the exposure. The more movement, the faster the shutter speed you require. And the faster your shutter speed, the more you'll need to compensate your exposure with ISO and/or aperture.
3. To increase DOF, you need to use a smaller aperture, among things. But now you're letting in less light so you need to compensate by increasing ISO and/or lengthening the shutter speed.

As you can see, there's no hard and fast rule on the perfect setting. Doing one thing will affect something else. You just need to understand what each setting does and select your best compromise.
A quick note on exposure compensation. It biases the camera's meter but in manual mode, it will only indicate (usually in your viewfinder) where your exposure is based on current exposure settings. It will not compensate your settings automatically like in the auto and semi-auto modes eg. Program, Shutter and Aperture.

Great help mate, appreciate your time. That's very informative :)

peterb666
20-06-2010, 7:28pm
Yea i use a 2 sec delay, cheers :)


I also dial in some "anti-shock", it would be even more important in the E-620 as you have a mirror that needs to be moved out of the way. Try a couple of seconds.

nissanman
20-06-2010, 7:57pm
Anti-shock, i havnt used that yet but seen it in the menu.

Will read up on it :)

Cheers

Scotty72
20-06-2010, 8:01pm
I just moves the mirror then, waits a second or two (or until you again press remote button) before taking the shot. Believe it or not the movement of the mirror will shake the camera minutely - esp with a long lens attached, this is noticeable.

Scotty

peterb666
20-06-2010, 10:36pm
With Live View, it also closes the shutter curtin too so you don't have the combination shock of both the closing and re-opening of the shutter curtin immediately before the start of the exposure - just the opening.