ANyway, back to your camera, if you shoot jpegs and not RAW files, this will then get cleaned up by the cameras onboard computer. I shoot with both the Sony A7iv and the Sony RX10iii, the RX has a tiny sensor in it, but it can take some great photos … up to a point … the one thing I am always watching for in the rx10 is the ISO levels.Ī high ISO level will give the appearance of a brighter frame with certain settings, but this will introduce noise into your image, this is a little bit like those old analog televisions where the signal wasn’t great and it gave a fuzzy picture. It is not always ISO, and I’ll get to that in a bit, but most of the time, high iso levels will give you a softer image than normal. Chances are, the IOS level was higher than normal and this is the culprit. If this has happened to you, go back to that photo and check your settings. On the back of the camera, everything looks good and I go away happy, but then when I look at the photo on a computer screen, it seems a little muddy, or just a little soft … I might want to photograph a nice sunrise, but the light isn’t quite there yet to shoot handheld … so I bump up my iso levels to get a good exposure. Has this happened to you when taking photos? It can look great on the back of your camera, but when you get it home on your computer, this is when you will see it is not very sharp. When you take a photograph with a high shutter speed and you still get a blurry photograph or a photo that is not sharp, it is normally due to the ISO level being too high. I was out taking photographs with my RX10iii and was wondering why my photos are still blurry even with really high shutter speeds? This got me thinking that there must be more to sharp photos than just fast shutter speeds.
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