Thanks for the suggestion - I
Thanks for the suggestion - I
i
An awful lot of electrons were terribly inconvenienced in the making of this post.
Gear Photos
Thank Bryan.
I find your way of providing the comparison of the ISO charts innovative and very useful - it is the best as far as I concern to actual compare optical quality of lenses. Lens optical quality in practice are relative. E.g. I am evaluating the new Sigma 50-500mm and I want to find out how does it compare to the Nikon and Canon closest equivalents, and Sigma
Bryan
I feel that both the ISO and Flare charts are brilliant and I use them all the time. I attempted to get users on another forum to use these to compare lenses. Much to my surprise they would rather look at the end result, a picture taken by a lens owner, to determine which is the sharpest.
I look forward to the day when there are no Flat Earth societies, when there are no more conspiracy theory web sites and when Donald Trump realizes his hair looks stupid
Canon EOS 7D, EF-S 10-22, EF 24-105L, EF 50 f1.2L, EF 70-300L, 430EX.
"Criticism is something you can easily avoid, by saying nothing, doing nothing and being nothing." - Tara Moss
Originally Posted by Raid
I am too. Are they looking at 100% or downrezed images, if they are looking at the latter then they either don't know very much about photography or have a very one sided view. Also, alens owners pictures are OK as long as they are taken properly. But you cannot compare it to anything side by side so it's not very comprehensive or conclusive.
BTW Bryan,I also love your comparisons. They have settled so many debates on this forum! And there are many people here that have the same opnion on the same lens becuase your charts.
John.
Fast Glass
It’s "here is a shot of a bird,look at how sharp this picture is, what a sharp lens". How sad it is that I cannot ask about PP because somebody might get offended.
Canon EOS 7D, EF-S 10-22, EF 24-105L, EF 50 f1.2L, EF 70-300L, 430EX.
"Criticism is something you can easily avoid, by saying nothing, doing nothing and being nothing." - Tara Moss
Here is a link that you could show to your friends www.juzaphoto.com/article.php.
A referance for the people that don't click on the link.
Down rezing your images softens it because of interpolation (reducing or enlarging an image). To get around that you just sharpen the downrezed image, best to do this in Tiff and save in Jpeg afterwards. At 600/800 pix the image is very small and the pixels are large on your monitor so you cannot see anything close to 100%, even moderate amounts of motion blur or a very soft lens would look perfectly sharp at web size. Of course the larger you print or display on your monitor the more obvious lens softness/motion blur/difraction becomes.
Hopefully that helps,
John.