Testing IS / VR..... no images..

Yes. You should be able to see the difference quite clearly by zooming in on images taken with/without IS on the camera's LCD. If you're careful to take the same shot with/without IS, then you can zoom right in and flick from one image to the other and back again using the main control wheel.

But you have to get the shutter speed just right. Too fast, and both images will be sharp; too slow, and both will be blurred by camera shake. What speed is "just right" depends on the focal length and on your technique.
 
what are the side effects of this feature regarding noise or other processing controls

my friend who does weddings says it 'doesnt give you such a good result'

what can he mean...does it have drawbacks

cheers
geof
 
It can cause weirdness in bokeh... thats for sure.

And I argued in that thread i linked that Nikon VR generally makes things worse, but nobody else agreed with me :)
 
Yes with your test you should see a difference if the subject is static, i.e. not moving around.

Bob Atkins did a good article on this a while back that can give you some more ideas on what scenarios you could test:

http://www.bobatkins.com/photography/tutorials/is2.html
 
i guess IS is more important for long distance subject and not as important on portraits?
 
Well, it helps with hand holdability (normally which is judged by focal length vs shutter speed, common wisdom being that shutter speeds below the numerical value of the focal length start to introduce operator shake (eg 1/100th and 200mm)), normally thats to do with relatively slow shutter speeds caused by poor/indoor light levels.

It shouldn't affect portrait shots, but could do if you are talking using a 135mm in poor light.

I have to say though that its really aimed at making those less skilled in camera holding and those less able to understand the figures as to what will be a marginal shot able to get decent pictures in marginal light situations.

^^thats not "dis'ing" anyone, but thats why it was invented, to use technology to overcome lack of photography experience. Others would either be able to hand hold it, or set the camera up differently (increase the ISO, open the aperture up more, add some artificial light or use a tripod!)
 
I have to say though that its really aimed at making those less skilled in camera holding and those less able to understand the figures as to what will be a marginal shot able to get decent pictures in marginal light situations.

^^thats not "dis'ing" anyone, but thats why it was invented, to use technology to overcome lack of photography experience. Others would either be able to hand hold it, or set the camera up differently (increase the ISO, open the aperture up more, add some artificial light or use a tripod!)

Or, a less cynical person may say, it was invented so that those who do have good technique and those that do understand the figures can use IS to shoot at even lower speeds than they would otherwise.

I see this a lot - people assuming that, just because I've got IS, I don't need to bother with good technique. They don't seem to realise that a combination of both is far better than either alone.
 
Yes, thats true too.
 
Canon 55-250mm IS lens.
At 250mm on a bottle.

With IS on
bottle1.jpg


With IS off
bottle2.jpg
 
what are the side effects of this feature regarding noise or other processing controls

Hi Geof, I seem to remember explaining this (it's a complete misunderstanding) a couple of days ago :suspect: ;)

my friend who does weddings says it 'doesnt give you such a good result'

He should know better.

what can he mean...does it have drawbacks

cheers
geof

No idea. No drawbacks, apart sometimes from extra cost, but many lenses these days have IS/VR/OS etc for no apparent extra cost.
 
And the definite bokeh issue as aptly demonstrated on this very forum:

http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showpost.php?p=1969594&postcount=26

Of course, for most of us, that won't be an issue, but its definitely an issue!

:lol: I speak in jest, but yeah, yeah, whatever. We've done this topic to death already ;) I saw that thread, and your post on it, which I ignored.

So, you are saying that the slightly unusal background in that pic, taken on a 300 2.8 lens renowned for it's lovely bokeh, is an IS problem? Could it possibly be that it was just an unusual background? It's an outrageous thought I know :shrug:

This sounds like (yet another) of your increasingly desperate attempts to somehow undermine IS as one of the all time great technological advances ever :eek:

Bear in mind that the pic was taken with an effective focal length of 960mm when rule of thumb says the minimum shutter speed for hand holding would be 1/1000sec without IS. Yet Hollis used 1/30sec.

Your rather unhelpful suggestion on the thread was to increase ISO to get a hand holdable shutter speed. Right. That'll be the way forward then, let's turn it up from ISO800 to ISO25,600 :eek: Sure, bokeh is not going to be much an issue with the image that comes out of that :D

When are you going to post some credible evidence for the nonsense you keep propagating?

:p :D
 
:lol: I speak in jest, but yeah, yeah, whatever. We've done this topic to death already ;) I saw that thread, and your post on it, which I ignored.

So, you are saying that the slightly unusal background in that pic, taken on a 300 2.8 lens renowned for it's lovely bokeh, is an IS problem? Could it possibly be that it was just an unusual background? It's an outrageous thought I know :shrug:

This sounds like (yet another) of your increasingly desperate attempts to somehow undermine IS as one of the all time great technological advances ever :eek:

Bear in mind that the pic was taken with an effective focal length of 960mm when rule of thumb says the minimum shutter speed for hand holding would be 1/1000sec without IS. Yet Hollis used 1/30sec.

Your rather unhelpful suggestion on the thread was to increase ISO to get a hand holdable shutter speed. Right. That'll be the way forward then, let's turn it up from ISO800 to ISO25,600 :eek: Sure, bokeh is not going to be much an issue with the image that comes out of that :D

When are you going to post some credible evidence for the nonsense you keep propagating?

:p :D

Not that I'm agreeing either way but I can understand how IS 'might' alter bokeh.

I think I'm right in saying that IS works by a giro detecting movements (camera shake) and uses electro magnets to move one of the elements in the lens to correct those movements. So, in doing that it would be altering the angle of that element in comparison to the rest of the lens, including the aperture membrane, which possibly could alter the bokeh (VERY slightly).

Of course that could all be *******s!
 
So, you are saying that the slightly unusal background in that pic, taken on a 300 2.8 lens renowned for it's lovely bokeh, is an IS problem? Could it possibly be that it was just an unusual background? It's an outrageous thought I know :shrug:

No, I don't think so. I'd be happy to have someone test the theory though. Shoot a really long subject with and without IS and see the result - making sure of course you get some lovely bokeh in at least one shot...

The swirlyness in that bokeh is AFAIK the indicative effect of IS/VR on what should be creamy smooth blurry lovelyness.

This sounds like (yet another) of your increasingly desperate attempts to somehow undermine IS as one of the all time great technological advances ever :eek:

Actually its VR thats the target of my venom, I've always said I like Canon IS :love: (except for the bokeh issue)

Your rather unhelpful suggestion on the thread was to increase ISO to get a hand holdable shutter speed. Right. That'll be the way forward then, let's turn it up from ISO800 to ISO25,600 :eek: Sure, bokeh is not going to be much an issue with the image that comes out of that :D

I dunno, take a look at some of the newly posted D3s high ISO pics... perfectly possible.

But anyway, the suggestion was that he was suffering at 1/30th and had used IS in conjunction with good technique to nail that shot. Which could have been moderated by using a higher ISO which his 50D is supposed to be capable of, according to all the press I have read. So its a far from :cuckoo: suggestion :D
 
Not that I'm agreeing either way but I can understand how IS 'might' alter bokeh.

I think I'm right in saying that IS works by a giro detecting movements (camera shake) and uses electro magnets to move one of the elements in the lens to correct those movements. So, in doing that it would be altering the angle of that element in comparison to the rest of the lens, including the aperture membrane, which possibly could alter the bokeh (VERY slightly).

Of course that could all be *******s!

Quite possibly ;)

Of course, anything that has an influence on the optical path may affect the image so you could argue that with IS. But it certainly doesn't shift the diaphragm.

Nor does it have any significant effect on bokeh, certainly relative to all the many other things that affect bokeh, IS is the least of your worries.

If you look at all those lovely long primes that are so liked for the quality of their out of focus backgrounds, they all have IS... :shrug:
 
No, I don't think so. I'd be happy to have someone test the theory though. Shoot a really long subject with and without IS and see the result - making sure of course you get some lovely bokeh in at least one shot...

The swirlyness in that bokeh is AFAIK the indicative effect of IS/VR on what should be creamy smooth blurry lovelyness.



Actually its VR thats the target of my venom, I've always said I like Canon IS :love: (except for the bokeh issue)



I dunno, take a look at some of the newly posted D3s high ISO pics... perfectly possible.

But anyway, the suggestion was that he was suffering at 1/30th and had used IS in conjunction with good technique to nail that shot. Which could have been moderated by using a higher ISO which his 50D is supposed to be capable of, according to all the press I have read. So its a far from :cuckoo: suggestion :D

:cuckoo: ;)
 
If you look at all those lovely long primes that are so liked for the quality of their out of focus backgrounds, they all have IS... :shrug:

Indeed. Altering something doesn't always mean having an adverse effect either, does it.
 
If you look at all those lovely long primes that are so liked for the quality of their out of focus backgrounds, they all have IS... :shrug:

And a switch to switch it off :p
 
definately interesting read as from my other thread on my sony a300 with inbuilt IS vs what i'm considering nikon d90 which doesn't have IS and lenses with VR is relatively expensive
 
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