Author Topic: D5 - ETTR?  (Read 12072 times)

Valerie S.

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D5 - ETTR?
« on: October 07, 2016, 06:34:31 »
Before switching to Nikon, I was used to shooting to the right - slightly overexposing (shooting RAW) and adjusting in post. I don't do it with the D500 and was wondering if anyone does this with a D5?

I've looked at many images and don't see a problem with low ISO DR. I just got the D5 today and have shoots tomorrow and Sunday and am trying to hit the ground running.

Any tips or recommendations are really appreciated. I'm still pretty new to Nikon, so everything helps.


Thanks

MFloyd

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #1 on: October 07, 2016, 09:11:22 »
Just use the D5 as the exposure meter indicates. And I didn't have any problems with low ISO dynamic range, at least in the environnement I'm shooting (sport, action). I just hit the 10'000 clicks mark. 😊
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Les Olson

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #2 on: October 07, 2016, 09:32:13 »
The idea that you need to ETTR was invented as a selling-point for mirrorless cameras. 

The basic reason to ETTR - to place your available dynamic range and as many digitised levels as possible, and minimise noise, in the important parts of the image - applies to the D5 the same as to every other digital camera.  However, the better your camera's noise performance the less likely noise is to be disturbing, the higher the camera's dynamic range the less often you need to squeeze out every last stop and the higher the bit depth the less risk there is of running out of levels before you reach the shadows.  (One problem ETTR is often alleged to solve but does not is low ISO noise in monochrome areas - typically blue sky).   

The downside of ETTR (apart from increased post-processing load) is increased lens flare.  Every stop you ETTR doubles the flare, and that applies to Nikon lenses the same as to all others.  If under the conditions you are shooting in your lenses have negligible flare they will still have negligible flare if you ETTR, but if flare is a problem ETTR will make it worse.  Whether your images will gain more from better shadow detail than they will lose from worse flare only you can say.

 

BW

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #3 on: October 07, 2016, 09:37:54 »
I dont know the D5 sensor, but I would stay away from overexposure. For Nikon, overexposure is for very brightly lit situation or low contrast scenes. The D3s and D4s didn't like recovered highlights. It is almost always better to lift shadows when using Nikon as long as you dont use high shutter speed or high ISO (Ballpark figure, <1/1000 sec or >12800 ISO). This is my experience for what its worth.

John Geerts

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #4 on: October 07, 2016, 09:50:03 »
Underexposure is better. Usually 1/2 stop. In post-prod, if needed, it can easily be corrected. And with the usage of a lot of manual Non-Nikkor lenses, it is the way to get the correct exposure, as usual they transmit more light than the lens-description.  Apart from that you gain speed, or lower ISO-value's.

Ilkka Nissilä

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #5 on: October 07, 2016, 11:44:07 »
The relationship between flare and normal image light is not dependent on the exposure as long as you don't clip any part of the image.

simato73

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #6 on: October 07, 2016, 11:47:08 »
The idea that you need to ETTR was invented as a selling-point for mirrorless cameras. 

The basic reason to ETTR - to place your available dynamic range and as many digitised levels as possible, and minimise noise, in the important parts of the image - applies to the D5 the same as to every other digital camera.  However, the better your camera's noise performance the less likely noise is to be disturbing, the higher the camera's dynamic range the less often you need to squeeze out every last stop and the higher the bit depth the less risk there is of running out of levels before you reach the shadows.  (One problem ETTR is often alleged to solve but does not is low ISO noise in monochrome areas - typically blue sky).   

The downside of ETTR (apart from increased post-processing load) is increased lens flare.  Every stop you ETTR doubles the flare, and that applies to Nikon lenses the same as to all others.  If under the conditions you are shooting in your lenses have negligible flare they will still have negligible flare if you ETTR, but if flare is a problem ETTR will make it worse.  Whether your images will gain more from better shadow detail than they will lose from worse flare only you can say.

 

ETTR was a mantra well before the first mirrorless cameras came about.
If I understand correctly ETTR is much less important with modern "ISO invariant" cameras.
Simone Tomasi

Ilkka Nissilä

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #7 on: October 07, 2016, 12:05:10 »
No camera that I'm aware of is truly ISO invariant. In terms of tonal quality and colour, the best quality is obtained when one gives the sensor as much light as possible. After the aperture and shutter speed has been determined,  ISO should then be set at a value which is as high as possible without causing significant highlight clipping. On a true ISO invariant sensor, you can always use base ISO and get the same result as you would by any higher ISO setting, but real cameras are not really like that. The D5 is about as far from an ISO invariant camera as they come, so it is better to raise the ISO than let the image be too dark at the time of exposure. Increasing ISO instead of lifting the image in post-processing reduces the impact of read noise on the image quality.

If you are not limited in the amount of light you can use, e.g. if your camera is on tripod and your subject is not moving, then obviously by all means use base ISO and a camera with a large dynamic range at base ISO (D810). The D5 isn't really the camera for such situations, it excels in action, AF, and low light. 

Les Olson

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #8 on: October 07, 2016, 13:36:48 »
The relationship between flare and normal image light is not dependent on the exposure as long as you don't clip any part of the image.

Flare is light that enters the lens but is lost by reflection at air-glass interfaces.  The lost light bounces around the inside of the lens: some goes back out the way it came, some is absorbed by the internal surface of the lens, and some hits the film/sensor, lowering contrast, dynamic range and colour saturation (flare light is more-or-less white).  For any given lens, the proportion of the entering light that is lost is constant, so if you double the amount of light that enters - ie, increase the exposure one stop - you double the amount lost.

Sure, the ratio of flare to image-forming light is also constant if you have no photosites at full well capacity.  But flare is the same over the whole sensor and image light is bright in some areas and dark in others.  If there are parts of the sensor receiving no image light, increasing exposure increases flare but not image light, and that reduces dynamic range.  Because the darkest possible pixels are less dark because of flare, and the brightest possible pixels are no brighter, the scene dynamic range you can record is reduced.  If you happen not to have a scene with less dynamic range than your sensor, that is good, but you often won't, and in any case the whole point of ETTR is that photographically unimportant highlights should be clipped to optimise mid-tone and shadow exposure. 

simsurace

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #9 on: October 07, 2016, 13:39:07 »
One problem ETTR is often alleged to solve but does not is low ISO noise in monochrome areas - typically blue sky
Photon shot noise is one area where ETTR will help in a very predictable fashion. Could you elaborate why you think that this is not the case?
Simone Carlo Surace
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simsurace

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #10 on: October 07, 2016, 13:42:29 »
ETTR was a mantra well before the first mirrorless cameras came about.
If I understand correctly ETTR is much less important with modern "ISO invariant" cameras.

No, the "ISO invariant" does nothing at all to change the importance of ETTR. It only matters in the question of whether to set ISO in-camera or in post.
Simone Carlo Surace
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simsurace

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #11 on: October 07, 2016, 14:06:08 »
Flare is light that enters the lens but is lost by reflection at air-glass interfaces.  The lost light bounces around the inside of the lens: some goes back out the way it came, some is absorbed by the internal surface of the lens, and some hits the film/sensor, lowering contrast, dynamic range and colour saturation (flare light is more-or-less white).  For any given lens, the proportion of the entering light that is lost is constant, so if you double the amount of light that enters - ie, increase the exposure one stop - you double the amount lost.

Sure, the ratio of flare to image-forming light is also constant if you have no photosites at full well capacity.  But flare is the same over the whole sensor and image light is bright in some areas and dark in others.  If there are parts of the sensor receiving no image light, increasing exposure increases flare but not image light, and that reduces dynamic range.  Because the darkest possible pixels are less dark because of flare, and the brightest possible pixels are no brighter, the scene dynamic range you can record is reduced.  If you happen not to have a scene with less dynamic range than your sensor, that is good, but you often won't, and in any case the whole point of ETTR is that photographically unimportant highlights should be clipped to optimise mid-tone and shadow exposure.

This explanation does not quite make sense to me.

If you first set your exposure such that your flare is 7 stops below full well, and your brightest image pixel is 1 stop below full well, you may use ETTR to expose one more stop such that your brightest pixel is just at full well. Your flare is now 6 stops below full well but you have changed nothing about the ratio between image and flare. You have increased the signal to noise ratio in the midtones, let's say 3-5 stops below full well and that is good. You can now reset your black point in post to 6 stops below full well and you don't see the flare anymore.

If your exposure already clips some highlights, you normally do not apply ETTR unless you think that further clipping those highlights is not detrimental to the picture. If that is the case, let's say you have one more stop of highlights that you can clip (let's say, specular highlights). Your flare is at -7 stops as before. After increasing exposure, your flare is at -6 stops and your brightest image-relevant pixel is just at full well. Again, you have maximized signal to noise ratio and you may reset your black point in post.

I fail to imagine a situation where you would not want to use ETTR.
Simone Carlo Surace
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bjornthun

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #12 on: October 07, 2016, 15:52:10 »
The idea that you need to ETTR was invented as a selling-point for mirrorless cameras. 

The basic reason to ETTR - to place your available dynamic range and as many digitised levels as possible, and minimise noise, in the important parts of the image - applies to the D5 the same as to every other digital camera.  However, the better your camera's noise performance the less likely noise is to be disturbing, the higher the camera's dynamic range the less often you need to squeeze out every last stop and the higher the bit depth the less risk there is of running out of levels before you reach the shadows.  (One problem ETTR is often alleged to solve but does not is low ISO noise in monochrome areas - typically blue sky).   

The downside of ETTR (apart from increased post-processing load) is increased lens flare.  Every stop you ETTR doubles the flare, and that applies to Nikon lenses the same as to all others.  If under the conditions you are shooting in your lenses have negligible flare they will still have negligible flare if you ETTR, but if flare is a problem ETTR will make it worse.  Whether your images will gain more from better shadow detail than they will lose from worse flare only you can say.

 
My first digital ILC was the Nikon D70, and with that camera, utilizing a CCD sensor, I used, or tried to use ETTR, as often as possible. With that sensor ETTR was helpful in generating less noisy exposures. The CCD sensor provided no liveview capability, which negated the concept of "mirrorless"....

The D300 was my first liveview capable camera, but unfortunately, the mirror moved up and down for each shutter cycle thus negating much of the utility of liveview.

The S5 UV/IR forensic camera from Fujifilm as one of very few CCD based cameras gave approx. 30 seconds of liveview with a CCD sensor, since heating and noise were much worse issues in the "good old days".

Nikon DSLRs employ a colour RGB matrix light meter, which is very precise. Light metering and WB always worked very well with my Nikon cameras. A side note is that both light metering and WB are improved, if you use a lens with a CPU, rather than a non-CPU Ai-S lenses. This can be seen, if you install a CPU (from Bjørn Rørslett) in a manual Nikkor. Knowledge of not only focal length and aperture, but also exit pupil assists the light metering function of the camera. The WB will affect the histogram, so correct WB is necessary for a correct interpretation of the histogram.

Les Olson

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #13 on: October 07, 2016, 16:37:14 »
This explanation does not quite make sense to me.

If you first set your exposure such that your flare is 7 stops below full well, and your brightest image pixel is 1 stop below full well, you may use ETTR to expose one more stop such that your brightest pixel is just at full well. Your flare is now 6 stops below full well but you have changed nothing about the ratio between image and flare. You have increased the signal to noise ratio in the midtones, let's say 3-5 stops below full well and that is good. You can now reset your black point in post to 6 stops below full well and you don't see the flare anymore.

If your exposure already clips some highlights, you normally do not apply ETTR unless you think that further clipping those highlights is not detrimental to the picture. If that is the case, let's say you have one more stop of highlights that you can clip (let's say, specular highlights). Your flare is at -7 stops as before. After increasing exposure, your flare is at -6 stops and your brightest image-relevant pixel is just at full well. Again, you have maximized signal to noise ratio and you may reset your black point in post.

I fail to imagine a situation where you would not want to use ETTR.

If you set your exposure so flare is seven stops below FWC, and then say, "I will ETTR" and increase flare to six stops below FWC the darkest pixel in the image, that in a flare free image was black, is one stop brighter.  The maximum dynamic range has, therefore, been reduced by one stop.  Sure, if the brightest pixel was one stop below FWC and is now just at FWC the dynamic range of your image is not affected.  Photography has always been easy when the scene dynamic range is less than the recording medium.  But if the scene dynamic range is the same as or greater than the dynamic range of the sensor - which is hardly uncommon - you have lost a stop of dynamic range because of the increased flare.  You can make the flare-affected pixels black again, but you can't recover the lost information. 

Flare is a form of noise, but like dark noise rather than photon noise, which is how you are treating it: it is added to every pixel, and its effect is greater in darker pixels.  If you increase exposure one stop you double the amount of light.  But the image light is not evenly distributed across the sensor.  Some parts of the image are bright and some are black: some parts of the sensor get a lot of light and some get none.   But the flare light is evenly distributed across the sensor.  So although the ratio of flare light to image light across the sensor as a whole is not affected by increasing exposure, the ratio is greater in the darkest parts of the image and increases further when you increase exposure. 

Image post-processing is not free - obviously, in terms of time, but also in terms of information loss.  The situation you would not want to use ETTR is any situation you don't need to. 

Ilkka Nissilä

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Re: D5 - ETTR?
« Reply #14 on: October 07, 2016, 16:38:46 »
One reason not to use ETTR is if you want the  file to be usable with minimal or no adjustments in post.