Brown-headed cowbird at high ISO - reducing noise.
I photographed this using my Nikon Z6iii, using raw and denoising in post. Electronic noise in digital photography is affected by a great many parameters. You probably know the main ones: ISO, sensor size, exposure time, noise-reduction filters, image resolution, and camera model. The nature of the image also plays a part, as shadows are more likely to have noise associated with them than highlights. I would normally not use such a high ISO to capture an image of a bird, especially one at a distance, but the lighting was terrible (heavy overcast and backlit), and I stopped down quite a bit. Admittedly, I could have gotten the same result at a lower ISO if I had shot at f/11, probably with a little less noise, but you can't argue with the end results. The details are fairly convincing. Part of the reason for the good results, apart from using a full-frame sensor, was that I employed a noise-reducing filter in Photoshop. The lighting improved a bit and allowe...