
Long Exposure Noise Reduction
The D30 has a built-in noise reduction system which only
takes effect if enabled (custom function 1) and if the exposure is longer
than one second. The following samples taken of the same low light scene
were taken at the full range of sensitivities first with noise reduction
switched off then with noise reduction enabled. A fairly good evaluation
of "Long exposure vs. High ISO".
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| ISO 100, 13 sec, F14 |
ISO 100, 13 sec, F14, Noise Reduction |
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| ISO 200, 6 sec, F14 |
ISO 200, 6 sec, F14, Noise Reduction |
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| ISO 400, 3.2 sec, F14 |
ISO 400, 3.2 sec, F14, Noise Reduction |
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| ISO 800, 1.6 sec, F14 |
ISO 800, 1.6 sec, F14, Noise Reduction |
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n/a
(not longer than 1 second)
|
| ISO 1600, 0.8 sec, F14 |
ISO 1600, 0.8 sec, F14, Noise Reduction |
I have to say that the ISO 100, 13 second exposure even
without noise reduction is fairly clean, yes there's some visible noise
but far less than we'd expect for such a long exposure. With noise reduction
enabled the image is clean without too much loss of detail. At higher
sensitivities noise becomes a little more of an issue although still manageable.

Parameters
The D30 features up to three "sets" of camera
parameters which control the cameras image processing algorithms. Each
set can be made up of any combination of a -1,0,+1 (Low, Normal High)
value for Contrast, Sharpening and Colour Saturation. By default the camera
uses a "Standard" set which has neutral (0) settings for each
parameter, using the supplied TWAIN driver you can add up to three other
sets (this is the ONLY way to change these parameters). Below we've provided
a set of samples using different parameter settings. Camera settings were:
ISO 100, Aperture Priority, F8.0, 1 second exposure (remotely fired),
Auto White Balance, 28 - 70 mm F2.8 L lens.
Parameters: Contrast
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Majority of pixels level 11 - 217 |
| Contrast -1, Sharpening 0, Saturation
0 |
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Majority of pixels level 11 - 225 |
| Contrast 0, Sharpening 0, Saturation
0 (Standard) |
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Majority of pixels level 11 - 236 |
| Contrast +1, Sharpening 0, Saturation
0 |
Looking at D30 samples it's obvious that the D30 does
all it can to preserve the bottom end of the luminosity scale, this can
be seen in the Normal image, no pixels are absolutely black but rather
ramp up from somewhere above level 11, the rest of the luminosity range
is represented fairly evenly without blowing out any detail. Contrast
adjustment seems to mostly effect the top end of the luminosity scale,
thus images don't look any "darker" at contrast+ but some of
the highlight detail has been blown out.
Parameters: Sharpening
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| Contrast 0, Sharpening -1, Saturation 0 |
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| Contrast 0, Sharpening 0, Saturation 0 (Standard) |
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| Contrast 0, Sharpening +1, Saturation 0 |
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| Standard + Photoshop Unsharpen Mask 200%, radius
0.6, threshold 2 |
Canon seem to have taken a "stance" on internal
sharpening, the D30 appears to perform only a very slight sharpen at the
Standard setting. When the first sample images were published many people
criticized them for being "Soft", I personally would support
Canon's choice, images come out looking much more natural (photographic)
with no nasty sharpening errors, jaggies or "halos" around detail.
This of course gives YOU the choice to sharpen the image further if you
wish, but you always have that unspoiled original.
Pushing sharpening to +1 doesn't make a huge amount of
difference, and that's a shame because some people will prefer to be able
to get sharp images immediately out of the camera (the detail is there)..
Maybe we could see a +2 or +3 setting in a firmware update?
The last sample above was sharpened in Photoshop using
what would normally be a hugely aggressive sharpen of 200%, but on the
D30 it just brings the images up to what we'd expect of a high internal
camera sharpening.
Parameters: Colo(u)r Saturation
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Measured
colour:
| |
Red |
Green |
Blue |
| Red patch |
62% |
17% |
17% |
| Cyan patch |
12% |
48% |
72% |
| Yellow patch |
66% |
62% |
11% |
|
| Contrast 0, Sharpening 0, Saturation
-1 |
 |
Measured
colour:
| |
Red |
Green |
Blue |
| Red patch |
66% |
16% |
16% |
| Cyan patch |
9% |
49% |
76% |
| Yellow patch |
67% |
63% |
7% |
|
| Contrast 0, Sharpening 0, Saturation
0 (Standard) |
 |
Measured
colour:
| |
Red |
Green |
Blue |
| Red patch |
71% |
13% |
14% |
| Cyan patch |
4% |
49% |
81% |
| Yellow patch |
69% |
68% |
1% |
|
| Contrast 0, Sharpening 0, Saturation
+1 |
Again, another very neutral "Standard" setting
from Canon, I personally preferred the colour of Saturation +1 straight
out of the camera, it's not overly saturated, you're not loosing any detail
and the colours are more "pleasing" (closer to the S1 Pro -
still not quite that good though). I had a parameter set programmed with
Saturation +1 and used it most of the time.
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