EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
Hi all, this is my first post on this forum but I've been treating the Digital Picture website as holy doctrine for the last year or so, when it comes to selecting hardware.
Im looking to get a wide angle lens somewhere in the region of < £700 and am torn between the 17-40mm f4L and the 15mm fisheye
I use a Canon 5D mkII, so 15mm is gonna be very wide, also, with 21MP, cropping an image or squashing it slightly to compensate for rectillinear conversion isnt going to be a huge issue.
My question is aimed at anyone who has used the fisheye in this way...
... how much image quality is lost in this process? I would like to be able to use the fisheye as a standard ultra-wide angle (from time to time). But I want the images to still be of good enough quality to submit to high end stock sites.
I use Lightroom 3 and the lens profiles to do any lens correction
Thanks in advance for any input
Re: EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
incase anyone's interested...
I found a way to answer the question myself - just found an undistorted image from my collection and applied the 15mm profile to it
my conclusion; unacceptable quality loss (in the corners) unfortunately, even when you limit the distortion correction to 50%. The CA is hugely amplified and the image becomes VERY soft in the corners - this was starting with a Sigma 50mm f/1.4 set at f/11.
I think I'll be going with the 17-40mm, maybe get a dedicated fisheye further down the line
Re: EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
Hey and welcome!
A small tip: You could also take a look at the Sigma 12-24 which is practically the widest non-fisheye lens for FF out there I think.
There was a small new thread about it from Ben (btaylor), but I cannot find it anymore...perhaps due to the forumcrash last wednesday...
Good luck,
Jan
Re: EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
cheers jan, I did look at it briefly, however, I want to stick with Canon as this lens will finally allow me to qualify for CPS membership :D
Re: EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
If you correct a fish eye it will be 12mm cropped 2 to 3 aspect ratio. But the 12-24mm will be sharper, but you loss f/2.8. So it's a trade off.
John.
Re: EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
Quote:
Originally Posted by markbarton
cheers jan, I did look at it briefly, however, I want to stick with Canon as this lens will finally allow me to qualify for CPS membership :D
Alrighty then. I never really heard of that and I checked it out... looks interesting and I'm gonna have a look at it, thanks [:D]
Re: EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
thanks John
I'm still torn between the two lenses [:S]
Re: EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
I don't think you should be 'torn'. If your goal is to take some photos with 'the fisheye look' then get the 15mm fisheye. If your goal is a 'standard ultrawide angle' then get the 17-40mm. Converting fishsye to rectilinear results in substantial quality loss, especially corner softness. You stated, "I want the images to still be of good enough quality to submit to high end stock sites." - I think that pretty much rules out rectilinear correction of fisheye images.
Re: EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
hi neuroanatomist - the reason i'm torn is this...
ive heard a few reports of poor sharpness (especially in the corners) on the 17-40
also, because I mostly do nature photography - the fisheye effect might be less obvious in pictures I take that I want to remain "conventional" (very few straight lines - more abstract shapes) do you get what I mean?
I havent had a chance to play with one myself (17-40) but will try to borrow one before I decide
Re: EF 15mm Fisheye rectillinear conversion question
Quote:
Originally Posted by markbarton
ive heard a few reports of poor sharpness (especially in the corners) on the 17-40
The rumors are true if you shoot wide open, but it becomes very sharp as you stop down. I use it at f/11 on my 5D2 and it's excellent.