I really like the low light shot--very clean with little noise. What settings did you use to get so little noise? Did you use a filter for the sun set shots? Very good down conversion quality. Impressive cam--super colour!
how you see the guy is not answering, i have also an fx1, so, if you want that little noise, just set you shutter speed to much more, and gain to medium or high light so you can put your shutter speed do 3000 or how ever you think you want, so you get the nose ;)
For low noise in low light situations, you would actually want to do the opposite of what this guy is saying. Set the cam into manual mode, and slow down the shutter to 60 (you might be able to get away with even slower if you are shooting a static shot) and open the iris all the way. In addition, to eliminate noise you want to put the gain off (0db) or maybe low. Anything above 6db may present some visible noise. Gain is really the factor that introduces noise into your shots. Keep it low.
The sunset shot was done without a filter. I used a higher temperature white balance to make the sun appear slightly warmer than it actually was. You can do this by manually white balancing on something that is mildly blue in color, but not too much. Maybe try using the outdoor or "cloudy/overcast" setting on your camera's white balance for the same effect.
I really like the low light shot--very clean with little noise. What settings did you use to get so little noise? Did you use a filter for the sun set shots? Very good down conversion quality. Impressive cam--super colour!
tomsnewsviews 2 years ago
how you see the guy is not answering, i have also an fx1, so, if you want that little noise, just set you shutter speed to much more, and gain to medium or high light so you can put your shutter speed do 3000 or how ever you think you want, so you get the nose ;)
i hope it helped.
cheers
733327 2 years ago
For low noise in low light situations, you would actually want to do the opposite of what this guy is saying. Set the cam into manual mode, and slow down the shutter to 60 (you might be able to get away with even slower if you are shooting a static shot) and open the iris all the way. In addition, to eliminate noise you want to put the gain off (0db) or maybe low. Anything above 6db may present some visible noise. Gain is really the factor that introduces noise into your shots. Keep it low.
corey111689 2 years ago
The sunset shot was done without a filter. I used a higher temperature white balance to make the sun appear slightly warmer than it actually was. You can do this by manually white balancing on something that is mildly blue in color, but not too much. Maybe try using the outdoor or "cloudy/overcast" setting on your camera's white balance for the same effect.
corey111689 2 years ago