Thu Jan 09, 2025 11:17 pm
I do a lot of concert photography in low-light venues with Sony cameras and am often well over ISO 12,800 (actually I just cap the ISO at 12,800 since Sony's noise reduction becomes overbearing above that point; I underexpose and pull up a bit in post). As an experiment last summer I shot some video with my OG BMPCC, which is notoriously bad in low light, at the dimmest of these venues. I shot raw, exposed for ISO 1,600, and used a 270-degree shutter angle, and while the resulting footage was of course very noisy I was able to denoise adequately for my purposes in Resolve -- this video was destined only for Instagram where most people would be viewing on their phones anyway.
I have the Sony A7s (first generation) and the A7iii; the A7iii performs just as well or better in low light than the A7s except at the very highest ISOs, which I never get close to myself; those would be mainly used by astrophotographers. I think the reason the higher ISO footage or photos look relatively clean is due to Sony's in-camera denoising; as you know BMD cameras do not apply noise reduction, giving you the freedom to denoise to your own taste in post.
Resolve 19 Studio, M2 MacBook Air with 24 gigs of RAM; also Mac Pro 3.0 GHz 8-core, 32 gigs RAM, dual AMD D700 GPU.