Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I took some night sky photos at zion national park and when I came back to review the images i took, the photos that i took with a really long exposure to caputre the foreground all have green, red, blue, and white dots all over the image. I have attached two photos for reference.
For reference i shot this image with my Sony A7RIII w/ a Sigma 24-70 F2.8. The image was shot at 24mm, ISO 800, F2.8, and at 300 seconds. I even have another image i shot at ISO 400 that yielded the same results. I know the common problem with noise is that the ISO is cranked up, but i find it hard to believe that ISO 800 and 400 would do this. The colored dots also appear at the same exact location in both photos. I was hoping someone could shed some insight on why this is occuring and what i need to do in order to prevent this. Thanks!
@gabrielv34663100 wrote:
I know the common problem with noise is that the ISO is cranked up, but i find it hard to believe that ISO 800 and 400 would do this. The colored dots also appear at the same exact location in both photos.
Those are all symptoms of hot pixels/thermal noise that only turn up with long exposure photography, not the more common ISO-based noise you are thinking of. That’s why you see it happen at any ISO speed, because this noise type is related to exposure time, not ISO
...Thank you for the direction! I will look into those.
Appreciate the response.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Shooting with the lens cap on is not always a mistake!
some random Google links:
https://photographylife.com/long-exposure-noise-reduction/amp
https://www.grantkaye.com/blog/2016/2/1/dark-frame-subtraction
https://digital-photography-school.com/10-common-mistakes-in-long-exposure-photography/
I'm not a photographer, but have been around long enough to pickup some things here and there.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Thank you for the direction! I will look into those.
Appreciate the response.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@gabrielv34663100 wrote:
I know the common problem with noise is that the ISO is cranked up, but i find it hard to believe that ISO 800 and 400 would do this. The colored dots also appear at the same exact location in both photos.
Those are all symptoms of hot pixels/thermal noise that only turn up with long exposure photography, not the more common ISO-based noise you are thinking of. That’s why you see it happen at any ISO speed, because this noise type is related to exposure time, not ISO speed. The links Stephen Marsh posted are relevant explanations of this specific problem.
The short answer to getting rid of this specific type of noise is to either:
Without a dark frame, it can be tough to get rid of this type of noise. If you crank up Noise Reduction enough to get rid of the colored spots, those settings usually kill color in other parts of the image. This tutorial by Greg Benz might have some techniques you can try to remove the hot pixels you’ve already captured.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Thank you so much! i will try some of the techniques out when i go shoot again but for now i appreciate the Greg Benz video.
Really appreciate the help.