Nikon D810 High ISO Noise Reduction
Like most Nikon pro and prosumer DSLRs, the D810 offers four High ISO Noise Reduction settings: Off, Low, Normal (default), and High, allowing you quite a bit of flexibility in choosing how you want to make the trade-off between subject detail and noise levels in JPEGs. The Nikon D810 manual doesn't say at what ISO High ISO Noise Reduction begins to be applied, so we've included crops from ISO 32 on up here. Note that the Nikon D810 user manual says when Off is selected, the amount of noise reduction is always less than the Low setting, but doesn't provide any additional details.
See for yourself how the Normal and Off settings work compared to RAW files with no noise reduction (or sharpening) applied. Click on any of the crops below to see the corresponding full-sized image.
As you can see by comparing the Normal and Off high ISO noise reduction settings, the Nikon D810 applies noise reduction at all ISOs, though it's pretty subtle at ISO 100 and below. You can also see the Off setting still applies some minimal noise reduction, just as Nikon says. Note that noise in low to moderate ISO JPEGs appears higher at the Low setting than noise in the converted RAW images with no noise reduction because no sharpening was applied to the RAW files. Also note that ISO 32 is an extended low ISO, and ISOs 25,600 and 51,200 are high extensions.
Like other EXPEED 4 based Nikons, the D810's default high ISO noise reduction generally does a good job at reducing luminance noise and a very good job at reducing chrominance noise, however as you can see, there can be quite an impact to areas with subtle tone on tone contrast, particularly in our red-leaf fabric already at moderately low ISOs. This is often the case with more aggressive chroma noise reduction and something to mindful of, especially if you're used to Nikon's previous generation models which tended to preserve more detail in low-contrast reds at moderate to high ISOs. You may want to try the Low setting if you're finding too much detail is lost at high ISOs.
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