On a DSLR you’ll typically find it in the LCD on the top right-hand side of the camera, as well as displayed beneath the image within the viewfinder. Your ISO setting is a key ingredient of your exposure so it’s displayed prominently on all cameras. This base ISO will produce the least amount of digital noise. For most Canon cameras it is ISO 100, and for most Nikon cameras it is ISO 100 as well, though some older models were ISO 200 and the newer D810 is ISO 64. A camera’s ‘base’ ISO is the lowest ISO that you can select. We often think of using high ISOs in dark places, but as long as your subject is static, there’s no reason why you can’t shoot at ISO 100 in the dark so long as you have a tripod. The world around your subject would be sharp, but it would be blurry. The caveat for this is that your subject must be static, because a long shutter speed will not be able to stop motion. Using a tripod allows you to use a longer shutter speed to get that precious light to your sensor, rather than having a more sensitive ISO setting. You can always use a tripod though if you want to maintain a low ISO and keep your photos noise free. Poor lighting, like in a forest under cloudy skies, would require a higher ISO and typically result in noisier images. If you have a point-and-shoot camera, as well as a DSLR for example, they will display different amounts of noise in their images at ISO 1000, although their exposures will be the same given the same aperture and shutter speed settings.īright lighting, like outdoors in the sunshine, will require a lower ISO setting and therefore gives a cleaner image with less noise. This means that different cameras produce different amounts of noise at different ISO settings and there are several reasons for this which are discussed later in this article. Whilst the ISO numbers are standardized, the amount of noise that corresponds to them is not. It starts off almost imperceptible at lower values, usually between 100 and 400, but builds to the point where people might begin to find it unacceptable for the image quality they desire. The tradeoff for ISO is that as you increase the camera’s sensitivity to light, your images get noisier, sometimes described as ‘grainier’. With shutter speed, as your exposure time increases to let in more light, it becomes harder to get sharp images of moving objects. With aperture you get a shallower depth of field as you open up the aperture to let in more light. If you’ve read the corresponding articles about shutter speed and aperture, the two other sides to our exposure triangle, you’ll know there’s always a trade-off to be made when trying to get more light into your camera. If we used a constant aperture, then for every stop we increase ISO, we can halve the shutter speed that’s required to get the same overall exposure. ISO 400 is one stop brighter than ISO 200 and that means it would take half as much time to record the same amount of light at the sensor. ISO 400 is twice as sensitive as ISO 200 and just as with shutter speed and aperture, when we double the light to the sensor, we refer to this as one ‘stop’ of light. As the ISO number doubles, so too does the amount of light being recorded by the camera’s sensor. With digital cameras though, we have the distinct advantage of being able to control the ISO of our photos from shot to shot if we want to. In the days of film, you would need to change your roll of film to use a different ISO. The lower the number, the less sensitive your film, or digital camera is to light.
A standardized set of numbers is used as a scale, like 100, 200, 400 & 800 (also see full table further down this article). Varying the ISO of your camera can have a dramatic effect on the look of your photo and along with shutter speed and aperture, it’s also part of our exposure triangle. These days we use ISO as a way to measure the light sensitivity of a camera’s digital sensor. In the earlier days of film, ISO was used to indicate how sensitive to light a particular type of film was, and back then was called ASA. St Peter’s Basilica, Rome – ISO 3200 What Is ISO?