Although the megapixel fetish race is the one that gets the most attention, I think the ISO equivalent is also pretty amusing (in a “shakes head, looks baffled” kind of way).

Now, I should preface all this by mentioning that I don’t have a “genre” of photography. I just photograph whatever attracts my attention at any given time, and that can be day or night.

Recently I saw a camera review in which the reviewer was showing pictures captured at ISOs that would have been considered witchcraft even ten years ago. They looked like garbage - noisy as anything and generally an aesthetic mess. But apparently the fact that they were taken at stratospheric ISO levels means that the whole world must see them because, I don’t know, reasons.

Although I’ve used cameras that are well known for good high ISO performance, a look through my Google photos collection shows me that I almost never go beyond ISO 3200, and I would guess that less than 5% of my (tens of thousands of) photos are shot at that sensitivity. On a usual day, I find that if I have a fast lens (F2 or quicker), I can get almost anything I want to shoot without going past ISO 800, or 1600 in a pinch.

I’d be interested to hear from people who do use these 5-or-6 digit ISOs on a regular basis, and what they shoot that necessitates these ISOs. Let’s hear some thoughts.

  • Tasty_Comfortable_77@alien.topOPB
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    11 months ago

    I definitely agree with this - although given some of the rather aggressive responses to this thread, it seems to be a minority opinion. The thing about these mega-high ISOs is that they can encourage people to shoot in practically zero light “because they can”, regardless of whether they should.

    • Zashypoo@alien.topB
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      11 months ago

      yep exactly… I mean if you’re on a job, fair enough… but even then I would never go for a commercial shoot without any lights regardless! And if you’re doing a commercial shoot, you generally have to plan for the lighting as well, i.e., end of day softer sunlight, rain/overcast, morning hard contrast etc etc.

      It does seem we’re on the minority which is surprising, then again, remember this is only reddit/ many self proclaimed pros here! I am by no means a professional but if I know for a fact from many pro friends that if I were to just suggest ‘just max out the ISO’ to cover up for boring or lack of light, they would definitely chuckle ahahah

    • bouncyboatload@alien.topB
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      11 months ago

      what the hell does this even mean?

      I’m shooting basketball in a dim gym so need fast shutter speed and high iso. can’t use flash to blind players. so your solution is to not shoot anything?

      I’m shooting a concert, singer is jumping around, low light, I can’t use a flash. so don’t shoot?

      I’m shooting owl that only flys and hunrs when it’s dark. just don’t shoot it?

      high iso enables use cases that are difficult to capture other wise. that’s the whole point