TheOnceAndFutureDoug

joined 10 months ago
[–] TheOnceAndFutureDoug@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

So I saw you were using Pixel Shift and that's why you can't use strobes.

Another solution is just change your technique and do the post-processing manually. There are plenty of tutorials online that show how to do super-resolution by simply taking a lot of images and stacking them in Photoshop.

If you do it right you can take a 10 MP camera shooting at 200 ISO and make a 100 MP image at relative 10 ISO. You just need to take a bunch of photos and stack them.

[–] TheOnceAndFutureDoug@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

If you're talking film the answer is film has literal grain because it's physical.

If you're talking digital the answer is sensors use gain to increase and decrease sensitivity. When you increase the gain you start having cross-talk as you overload individual pixels and the detection kinda bleed across them.

That's a very broad simplified explanation as I understand it.

[–] TheOnceAndFutureDoug@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Depends why it failed.

  1. Cosmic ray (yes really)? Reuse it. It's fine, just hilariously bad luck.
  2. Software glitch? Formatting the card would solve it if it was the card. If it was a camera glitch then the card is fine. Reuse it.
  3. Physical fault with the card? It's dead, get a new one.

If you don't know which one of these three it was it's your choice on rolling the dice. Personally I wouldn't but we each make our own risk assessments.