The sensitiveness of the sensor to light
is also known as ISO. In order to understand this better think of
walking from a bright lighted room straight into a room with hardly any
light at all, or a dark room. Once you walk in, your eyes won’t be able
to see a thing. Give it a few minutes and your eyes will adjust to the
darkness and you will start to see your surroundings. Your eyes
automatically compensate for the lack of light by increasing the
sensitivity (ISO) of retina (sensor) or increasing the diameter of Irish
(aperture). Camera does the same thing with ISO with the help of Aperture & Shutter Speed.
In the days of film cameras users would
load films of different speeds (ISO) depending on the lighting condition
in which they would be shooting pictures. If they would be shooting in
low light conditions, they would load the camera with a high ISO film
and vice versa. When digital cameras replaced the film cameras of
yesteryears, the concept of ISO remained the same but the films were
replaced with electronic sensors. Still today, camera manufacturers
refer to the sensitivity of the sensor with the term ISO. If you check
the specifications of a DSLR for example, you would find details such as
ISO 100 – 6400. What it means is basically that the sensor is able to
shoot images in a range of 100 – 6400. It can range from 25 to 256000.
Higher the ISO number, higher the sensitivity. Usually ISO 50-400 is
considered low ISO. ISO 800 and up are considered highISO. They both
have their advantages & disadvantages.
High ISO
High ISO lets you take photographs at
locations where there is a lack of light & higher shutter speed is
required to freeze the action. For example in indoor sport or wedding
ceremony where even widest aperture is not enough to provide sufficient
light for a shutter speed to freeze the action. In that situations,
camera compensates for the lack of light by increasing the ISO. Now, in
low light situations, you could use a flash, but if you don’t have one
or you don’t like the effect of artificial light or in certain places
where Flash are prohibited you can move to a higher ISO.
You should remember that although a
higher ISO setting will let you get a correct exposure even with a poor
light source, you will also get more digital noise. Digital noise is the
small squares that you can sometimes see on photographs. Usually
cameras (both DSLR and Point & Shoot) face an issue of noise when
shooting pictures at high ISO levels. This happens because the filter
array of red, blue and green are unable to properly identify the correct
colors in the light waves and thus dark spots appear on the final
picture. With a low ISO setting, you will hardly or not even see those
squares, but with a high ISO setting, those squares are visible.
Fortunately modern DSLR like High end Canon 1DX, 5D mark III) or Nikon
D4, D700, D800 can handle noise very well and capable to produce clean
images even at 3200 ISO.
Low ISO
On the other hand the lower ISO setting
is generally used when there is lot of light around the subject or the
subject is well illuminated or most importantly when more details with
less noise is required. For example portrait & landscape photography
the ISO setting is deliberately reduced to something 100 or less to
produce more details.
However, a low ISO setting is also a
cause for camera shake if you are holding the camera. It is not because
of lower ISO, but usually for longer shutter speed. Because in low ISO
setting sensor needs more time (longer shutter speed) to absorb light.
With a slow shutter speed, the subject can move or your camera can move
while the shot is being taken and you will end up with a blurred photo.
Now you have two options, use external light source (Flash) or a Tripod.
You will need a bit of practice when
using ISO. Take several photographs of the same subject, under the same
light conditions, with different ISO settings. Keep a note of the
sequence of ISO settings you used so when you view your photographs on a
large screen, you can identify how these different ISO settings
affected your photograph.
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