I noticed a good deal of
grainy image noise in modest light, and white balance was pretty inconsistent.
Not exact matches
«Crocodile» Dundee's 2.35:1, 1080p transfer is pleasingly
grainy (except during the title sequence — heavily DVNR'd, I presume, to tone down optical
noise), but the source betrays pinhole artifacts and other signs of debris, and the
image has a tendency to exhibit the sort of dimness you'd expect at a movie theatre trying to conserve the bulb life of the projector.
When lighting is dimmer, things get tough pretty quickly, but RIM has tweaked the camera to be usable in low - light: the trade off is that the
image will get very
grainy (as seen below), but it's mostly OK if you are going to share it on the web in low - resolution (640 × 480 or so) as the downscaling of the photo takes out a lot (but not all) of the
noise.
The Prime's low - light
images were
grainier with a good deal more
noise.
The camera consistently produced
grainy images with a lot of
noise.
Indoors and under less - ideal lighting,
image noise and slow shutter speeds render photos
grainy and soft.
The low light performance of the V30 + is pretty average as result often turn out to be a little
grainy and the camera app is also little laggy in low light environments — the large aperture does pull in more light and makes even objects in dark areas visible, but this benefit is offset by the amount of
noise that creeps into the
images.
Sure, it captured accurate colors from my purple T - shirt and the red wall behind me, but that
image contained the same
grainy noise we see in shots captured on $ 500 notebooks.
However for those extremely
grainy shots, Denoise does exactly what it says: it reduces
noise and produces a mostly clean
image.
The iPhone's
image was a bit
grainier than the S7 Edge's, but the two phones each had an impressively low amount of
noise (color speckles).