The Canon EOS and Photography Forums

Photography Forums => The Canon EOS Forum => Topic started by: KeithB on October 13, 2010, 01:39:26 PM



Title: Long Exposure Noise Reduction
Post by: KeithB on October 13, 2010, 01:39:26 PM
On the Apple Aperture discussion board there is some discussion about hot pixel mapping. 

I know that my XS has the dark-field subtraction, where it takes an image with the shutter closed and subtracts it from the original image.

How does the RAW setting affect this?

Does the RAW data reflect the dark-field subtraction?  Or is RAW just RAW, without the dark-field correction.  I am sure you don't get both images.


Title: Re: Long Exposure Noise Reduction
Post by: jodaco on October 14, 2010, 08:05:37 AM
When using long exposure noise reduction the effect is burned into the raw file. You do not get separate files and I don't believe the light and dark frames are stored separately in the file. In fact I'm almost certain they are NOT since the files size is the same either way.

An alternative if you need the dark separate is to shoot it manually. Set long exposure noise reduction off. Then shoot another with exactly the same setup (exposure, ISO, etc) with the lens cap on. You can then do the subtraction in post processing. This is done with astrophotography all the time. Other than having access to the dark frame this has the advantage of being able to use one dark for many lights which saves time.

Note that for the best results the multiple darks should be averaged. This reduces noise in the dark that is not in the light frame.