>>3655226>>3655229>>3655231>>3655233You've a lot of room in those photos. First one is good technically, it will be pretty much the same on any format. Later two require tripod, and long exposures. Second one exhibit major errors. You'd possibly get a bit better noise performance in the shadows, but it's mainly just poor shot. Poor exposure, poor subjects, poor framing. It appears you're not aware of the situation you're shooting in there the most. Shooting into the sun with harsh shadows around you is very challenging. No camera has dynamic range as good to capture everything, so you must be selective. It is not an easy situation to shoot in, but using environment correctly, your can get quality shots even out of that. First thing, you cannot get sky and shadows in situations like that. You must pick one and stick with it. Either you shoot just shadows, by eliminating direct sunlight from the shot altogether, or you shoot only sunlight, eliminating shadows, or you expose for the sunlight, letting shadows blow into black, often ending with silhouettes. For the later two situations, you always shoot with sun in your back, so your subjects get proper exposure. For the first, its the opposite, you shoot into the shadows looking for open shades. Since you've no powerful light from the sky, shadows reverse. Diffused light then bounces from various surfaces and creates opportunities everywhere, just just must be selective and apprehensive of them.