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Originally posted by harvestnow
ISO or ASA refers to ur film speed lor. (",)
Originally posted by delirious
er..what does ISO means??and shutter speed??
for night shot,whats the best arrangement??
Originally posted by currahee
do the ISO 400 films still turn out grainy when processed to 4R or 8R?
Originally posted by currahee
so is it also grainy for 4R? for both day n night shots using either Kodak/Fuji 400?
Originally posted by ziploc
If you need Iso400 to be printed to 4R while do not want to spend too much on the negative, a good choice is Fuji superia xtra 400. I've gotten pretty good results with it, the grains are pretty fine for an Iso400 film. Avoid the Kodak max 400. It's one of the worst, if not the worst (if you are coming down to today's seed, I can show you the prints from Fuji xtra 400).
Originally posted by harvestnow
gee... well... it depends alot on the lab u bring into also...
to me... Color Lab gave me v. satisfactory results...
it's true, kodak max 400 is one of the worst.. gee...
even if fuji superia 1600 can give superb results.
Originally posted by delirious
er..what does ISO means??and shutter speed??
for night shot,whats the best arrangement??
Originally posted by ziploc
If you need Iso400 to be printed to 4R while do not want to spend too much on the negative, a good choice is Fuji superia xtra 400. I've gotten pretty good results with it, the grains are pretty fine for an Iso400 film. Avoid the Kodak max 400. It's one of the worst, if not the worst (if you are coming down to today's seed, I can show you the prints from Fuji xtra 400).
Originally posted by butters
so wat are the general guidelines to observe when choosing a iso setting for a digicam(ie canon ixus/a40)? like when to use say iso 50, and when to use the max setting of 400? since digicams allow for unlimited trial & error, how am i to judge if the picture taken should warrant the use of a higher/lower iso setting?
also, i'm kinda confused on whether to change iso settings or the exposure compensation, since afterall higher iso means greater sensitivity to light? how does this differ from exposure compensation? hope one of the pros here can help explain..
Originally posted by butters
:gbounce: pls pls pls... someone explain?
Originally posted by mervlam
my general guideline is to use as low an ISO as possible. If you find the photo blur from handshake, use a high ISO.