I've heard that. But a PC was not around at the same time. Here are the shots. Both are with the lumia. Would like to see what his looked like.
https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=5B700CA437579731!310&authkey=!ANas-IXkyaluq0Y
https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=5B700CA437579731!307&authkey=!AFawHr673GDVW6o
I would like to see those same shots in night mode with ISO set to 200 using the camera button to ensure focus is set before capturing.
I believe night mode with ISO 200 will give you the best shot. With good focus too of course. Those shots are close to being great!
But if your getting bad glare still exposure will fix that. I've mastered ISO but I'm still newbie with exposure. Maybe someone that understands exposure could educate us all.
Some pictures I took. Not impressed by the bluriness. Am I doing something wrong?
https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=9CCCC9F92B667109!1397
Some pictures I took. Not impressed by the bluriness. Am I doing something wrong?
https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=9CCCC9F92B667109!1397
The blurry ones are taken at very low light. I can tell because shutter speed is at around 1/10 to 1/5 sec even at high ISO. That's very very slow shutter speed for handheld shots even with OIS. Some blurriness is unavoidable at that situation. Be glad you are still getting modestly usable images. With iphones and Samsungs, you will get unusable pictures (either very dark or much more blurry) in the same situation. There are plenty of such side by side comparisons on Internet. Don't listen to a few naysayers on this board. L920 schools the competition in low light.
What you can do to increase sharpness in that situation:
- Keep ISO to the max (800). I see ISO of 650 on some of those shots. Increasing ISO will let you increase shutter speed just a tad.
- If you think the night shots can be a little less brighter, set the exposure bias to -2/3 to -1 EV. By doing this you will get a bit darker image but benefit from 66% to 100% faster shutter speed or lower ISO for less noise.
- Don't pixel peep. Downsize image dimension to smaller size (e.g. 1024px or even less) in post processing. It will look more presentable for facebook and etc.
- Use a support such as a tripod. Miniature ones are quite portable and will do wonders for ultra low light situations like that. If a support is not an option, learn to keep your hands real steady.
Thanks for the advice. I will try and take more pictures with these considerations and will post them as soon as I can.
Few tips that i can give.
- Like someone already said, keep your camera lens perfectly clean. Your lens was obviously smudged since those light streak were clearly visible. If your lens is clean there shouldn't be any of those streaks.
-Avoid "hotspots" in your photo. Multiple photos was ruined because of those bright light sources near you. Here is good example https://public.blu.livefilestore.co...tJm7tk39kzRPfmTREk/WP_20130105_089.jpg?psid=1 Avoid those in all cost and frame those out of your photo or hide them behind objects. It ruins exposure and makes photos look hazy. Here is other sample https://skydrive.live.com/?cid=9ccc...cid=9CCCC9F92B667109&id=9CCCC9F92B667109!1414
-In scenes like you were shooting when there is multiple bright light sources you can try shooting even with ISO 100 and -2 EV. Those settings gives nice moody night shots.
-Keep phone steady long enough to make sure photo is fully exposured before moving it. There seems to be slight delay when you press shutter and photo is taken.
There was many photos that could have been great with right settings. Unfortunately Auto settings rarely take good night shots. Those are almost always over exposured. Shooting towards light source is very tricky. If possible always keep light source behind you.
I guess I had unrealistic expectations from the phone.
I guess I had unrealistic expectations from the phone.