A New and Different DSLR ‘Sensor Dust’ Problem

Since I sometimes go off for a week or more to shoot in the backcountry, I’ve worried from time to time about getting a dirty sensor early in the trip and not realizing it until I return… a few hundred or thousand frames later. Yesterday I ran into such a problem on a night photography shoot and didn’t realize it until I moved the photos to my computer and checked them in Adobe Bridge.

The first few shots were fine, but perhaps a half dozen into the sequence I noticed a very black smudge near the bottom of a vertical frame image. (This means it was near the “top” of the sensor when the camera was held this way.) On the next couple of shots the “smudge” moved in bug-like fashion up into the frame, finally lodging close to the middle. This was one strange dust spot – like none I’ve ever seen before. The typical spot leaves a semi-transparent smudge on the image and generally stays in one place on the sensor. (Technically, the AA filter, but you know what I mean…) This one was black and moving – at first as I cycled from frame to frame I wondered if I had a bug crawling around inside the chamber.

Fortunately, I’ve adopted a sensor cleanliness strategy that relies more on post-processing removal than on the futile attempt to keep the sensor in a pristine state of cleanliness. So far I’ve been able to remove the offending blob from all of the images from the shoot that I’ve worked on.

If there is a moral to this story, it might be this – even if you hope to keep your sensor clean, you still need to develop the post-processing skills necessary for dealing with dust specks when they unavoidably do show up.


G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” (Heyday Books) is available directly from him.

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Shop Buildings at Night

Mare Island Shops at Night
Mare Island Shops at Night. Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, California. March 22, 2008. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

At least once a year I join The Nocturnes (the San Francisco Bay Area night photographers’ group led by Tim Baskerville) to photograph the Mare Island Naval Shipyard. This amazing historical site near Vallejo, California was the first US Navy shipyard on the west coast and dates to the mid-1800s. It was active until the late 1990s. It is a night photographer’s paradise with wonderful old buildings ranging form officers’ homes to dry docks to huge cranes to wonderful old brick factory buildings

keywords: night, nocturnes, mare island, naval shipyard, vallejo, california, usa, stars, artificial, lights, brick, quonset, door, road, street, fence, windows, smoke, stack, blue, yellow, brown, shadow, urban, landscape, travel, historic, stock

Abandoned Structures, Seattle Gasworks Park

Abandoned Structures, Gasworks Park
Abandoned Structures, Gasworks Park. Seattle, Washington, August 21, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.

These abandoned tanks and related equipment dominate this historic Seattle park. I return here almost every time when I visit Seattle and I especially like the cloudy conditions like those on the day I made this photograph.

keywords: black and white, seattle, gas, works, gasworks, park, industrial, equipment, structures, tanks, ladders, railings, pipes, valves, steel, rust, tower, urban, landscape, travel, historic, washington, stock, railing

Watch for a Site Format Changes

Moonlit Cove, Thousand Island Lake

Moonlit Cove, Thousand Island Lake. Ansel Adams Wilderness, California. July 27, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.

I am contemplating a change in the way that photographs are displayed on the home page and in the rss news feed. Instead of displaying the relatively large versions I have been posting here, I will switch to somewhat smaller versions that will expand when you click on them. I think this will have several benefits: those who subscribe to the rss feed will find that my posts take up less space in their feed viewers, there will be less scrolling to do on my home page, and those who want to see full size images will still be able to do so. One small downside will be that rss feed readers will have to click the title link of each post and come to the home page to see the complete display.

I’ve placed an alternate version of today’s image into this post, displayed in the new format.

As always, I welcome your feedback about this or anything else on my web site.

Thanks,

Dan

Photographer and visual opportunist. Daily photos since 2005, plus articles, reviews, news, and ideas.