Today it happened while I was trying to correctly expose a white rose, I under exposed (forgetting I had my view screen turned up high) I thought my icture was exposed correctly when in actual fact it was underexposed, when I corrected this in elements raw thinging I got these lines:
http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j6/rachelsne/Sensor-lines.jpg?t=1212696331
The same thing happened to this one a while back, I under exposed, I went from the sunny giraffe pen to the shady (what ever this animal is) pen and didnt change any settings DOH! so I had the same problem
http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j6/rachelsne/Sensor-lines-002.jpg?t=1212696849
am i correct to think because it was so underexposed it just cant find the information, and I am seeing some kind of marks on the sensor?
I know its probably my fault, but i want to make sure this is normal and my insides of the camera is ok...
You can reduce or avoid noise by shooting at low ISO settings and properly exposing your shots. The more/farther you have to adjust the levels/brightness in post, the more you will bring out the noise.
I once had a crappy little P&S digicam for work; it crapped out on me and gave me images that looked more like cartoons. I was playing with the images to see if I could save them...and when I cranked the sliders all the way...I found a very weird pattern in the clear areas (sky)...it was certainly a geometric shape and was repeated in a pattern. It must have been the sensor but it was really weird.
out of interest what mode and settings were you using?
The LCD's on cameras are notoriously inaccurate... Histograms are the place to be. :o)
I had actualy thought I would need a slower shutterspeed-hence the tripod
I dont see the lines anywhen else-only on extreemly underexposed pics, so I shouldnt worry I guess,
Also I only asociated noise with ISO which was set at 100 so it didnt cross my mind---Oh so much to learn :)
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March 03, 2010

