quality settings
April 5, 2009Photographers brought up on film are familiar with the fact that faster, more sensitive films bring with their speed an increase in grain. In digital photography, the equivalent of grain is noise – but ‘noise’ is much more complicated than ‘grain’.
noise – problems and benefits
Caused by many factors, including heat, the nature of the electrical signal and activity in the sensor itself, the outcome of noise is always the same – irregular, random specks or sparkles that don’t relate to specific details in the photograph. In fact, because noise tends to mask detail it is generally regarded as a flaw that should be avoided or reduced. In the same way that many film-using photographers tried hard to avoid grain in their photographs – by working with the slowest practicable films and developing their images with special formulations – so digital photographers continually endeavour to avoid noise.
It is the electronic nature of noise that determines its rapid rise with increased sensitivity. Setting higher sensitivities means that we are amplifying the image signal – making it ‘louder’. However, in the process, we also amplify the errors (the noise) already present in the signal. While the overall level of noise is falling thanks to clever algorithms, it is still broadly true that noise rises with ISO setting, with pixel count and with the use of smaller sensors.
However, noise is not necessarily a bad thing; it can give texture to what is sometimes too smooth and clinical an image plane. It’s worth experimenting with different ISO settings to learn about the characteristics of your camera’s noise and how to exploit them. If you want to add noise artificially, you will get the best results from specialist software which simulates film grain.
detail and resolution
Resolution is a measure of how much detail has been recorded to a certain level of contrast. A high-resolution setting, however, doesn’t necessarily guarantee a high-resolution image – that is, a high-quality one full of useful detail – it means only that the image contains a lot of pixels. If the camera lens is of poor quality, recording an image with more pixels won’t make it any sharper. The practice of calling the largest file setting “high resolution” is therefore slightly misleading. In fact, it’s vital to keep in mind the difference between measurements, such as resolution, and assessments, such as quality.
When you choose a resolution setting, you’re making a decision involving more than simply the size of file to save. A high-resolution file needs far more data processing than a low-resolution one, so it takes longer to process each image, slowing the speed of operation – and of course you’ll be able to fit fewer large files onto your memory card. If you have a camera that can record 10 megapixels or more, it’s useful to try the second-largest resolution setting and compare the results with the largest. You may well find that for your needs the smaller file is perfectly suitable.
compression and quality
One way to balance the high storage needs of large files with a desire for good quality is to compress the files, thereby reducing the memory space they occupy. The JPEG protocol is able to reduce files to as little as one-tenth of their original size without visible loss in quality, and even more if visual loss is allowed. However, JPEG is a ‘lossy’ scheme, which means that data lost as a result of JPEG compression is forfeited forever. Virtually all digital cameras can save files in JPEG. Some allow you to set the compression or quality level: the best strategy is to set the highest quality (the lowest compression) if possible.
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