Joseph Hutson
Well-known member
I guess the point is that if ISO is completely useable... what does ISO 500 look like?
Jim
I guess you are the only one that can answer that for us, eh?
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I guess the point is that if ISO is completely useable... what does ISO 500 look like?
Jim
... just like 5K's little brother.
Jim
I don't think you'll see a huge change in lighting styles anytime soon. Well lit images are well lit images and that won't change.
When fast film stocks came around that added a tool to the arsenal, it did not change lighting forever.
David
I don't think the jump from 500 ASA to 800 ASA is enough to radically change lighting techniques in general, which are based as much on stylistic trends as they are technology -- after all, look at Storaro's work on "Reds" or "Apocalypse Now" shot on 100 ASA film, the lighting is still "contemporary". Or look at Ridley Scott's "Alien" and "Blade Runner", also shot on 100 ASA stock.
What will change over time with greater sensitivity and dynamic range is the look of night exterior and super low-light photography, but even today, we have a lot of tools to shoot in those conditions, so what these new sensors will mainly get us is less noise in the same low-light image.
The trouble with actually lighting your average interior scene to ASA ratings in the 1000's with fast lenses is that it can actually be hard to get your light levels that low, when even a 100w Dedolight is too powerful. Plus natural ambience really starts to take over and lower the contrast and "pollute" the shadows with odd colors and multiple sources. Have you ever been out at night and noticed all the faint shadows on a face caused by all the different sources out there, though quite dim? These days I find myself having to flag off a lot of stray lighting outdoors at night when working at really low levels. Otherwise, you discover faint camera and mic shadows in post that you didn't catch on the set all the time.
Even in that test of Leonardo DiCaprio lighting the cigar and having his match light his face... it's not like we have never seen such an image before in a movie. Even "The Grapes of Wrath" from 1939 has a scene with a face convincingly lit by a match in the hand.
2000 ASA at T/1.3 is not outside the realm of 35mm 5219 500T stock if you push it two stops, it just would be grainier.
So certainly low-light scenes are going to get easier to do, with less noise, but I don't see that causing fundamental lighting changes; in fact, most night work today attempts a reasonable level of realism, ever since the 1970's (look at "Taxi Driver"), and should it be even easier to get realistic night photography, so that anyone can do it... for all you know, the next stylistic trend will be away from realism just because the style pendulum always starts to swing the other way at some point. If we see thousands of movies shot in city streets at night in available light, you know at some point someone will be hailed as the next cinematic "genius" for actually artificially lighting the streets with some unusual look.
But I agree that creativity can be expanded with tools that have greater abilities. Whether that expansion is meaningful or significant is often debatable though. Art often thrives on limitations, so fewer limitations doesn't necessarily increase the level of artfulness.
Yes, it will be easier to stop down now when necessary, or use a special lens that is slower, or use slow telephotos for night exteriors, etc.
Here's a fundamental question I keep discussing with people. If you had a Red 1 at 320iso sitting right next to a Mysterium-X Red set at 800 iso, both pointing at the same thing and with the same lens setting, will the Red M-X clip at any point where the Red1 did not? Or is it that they'd both clip identically but the M-X get's 1.5 stops deeper into the shadows?
Here's a fundamental question I keep discussing with people. If you had a Red 1 at 320iso sitting right next to a Mysterium-X Red set at 800 iso, both pointing at the same thing and with the same lens setting, will the Red M-X clip at any point where the Red1 did not? Or is it that they'd both clip identically but the M-X get's 1.5 stops deeper into the shadows?
I don't think any tests at that level of detail have been released yet.
The MX sensor seems to be (1) faster; (2) with more dynamic range and (3) less noise. But by how much compared to the old sensor? Well, we'll find out as more and more people get their hands on the MX sensor.
Questions yet to be answered includes if 800 ASA is really the MX setting that splits highlight and shadow detail equally, or is it more like 500 or 640 ASA. If it really is 800 ASA, that could be problematic in sunlight -- we're all going to have to start carrying an ND1.2, 1.5, and maybe even an ND1.8.
But the great thing about greater dynamic range is that exposing is a little less critical, you have more leeway. Eventually we'll have something like color negative film in terms of range, making exposing a lot more idiot-proof and problematic shots a lot more fixable in post.
2000 ASA at T/1.3 is not outside the realm of 35mm 5219 500T stock if you push it two stops, it just would be grainier.