raid
Dad Photographer
I am still learning how to do the switch from 8bit to 16bit, John.
Suggestions that I'm deciding which camera to buy based on internet views are worthless and silly.
Sorry, I didn't mean for it to come off that way. My point was to not get fooled into thinking something is great or bad based on someone else's photos... they could be great, or horrible, at exposure and post production.
+1!
Andy, I thought we were getting somewhere until your last post. if you set your standard at the internet level, then there's no reason to acquire either a 240 or an MM, nor any reason to worry about the difference between them. An X100s or a Sony A7 can meet the standard quite well. I'm very happy with mine for the Internet and wouldn't have considered, let alone acquired, an MM if I didn't plan to use it for prints.
Kirk
It is not near as loud as a 5DII and sounds a whole lot better.
The files from the MM are night and day from even a 5DIII. There is just SO MUCH there.
I had a show last April here in Chicago (35 prints) and some of my old college friends (zone system snobs as I once was) were all shocked by the image quality from a digital B&W camera. Is it film NO but I like the qualities I get from B&W prints from the MM. It is different from film. If you want the film look I always say shoot film. I shot with 500 C/Ms for decades and the image quality at 3200 ISO reminds me of 120 tri-x processed in rodinal.
I've shot with both the M240 and I have had the MM for almost 2 years and for B&W the MM is the camera hands down but if you are going to shoot color then get the M240.
If you are going to be in Chicago next May/June I have another exhibit at the Rangefinder gallery 300 W Superior. Swing by and see for yourself. Seem though you already had your mind made up before you even asked the question but if you really want a great B&W shooting experience and B&W prints that are truly amazing and aren't looking ot shoot color then get the MM. It is a great tool for that particular job. Better in my opinion than converting.
Please see prints not 80kb smashed jpgs on a computer screen. There is a huge difference.
OK thanks... I apprecieate your posts posts and experience. For some reason I thought you were Seattle based.
I was in Solms just after the MM came out. They had one of their professional photographers take an identical scene on a M9 and MM and converted the M9 file to b&w. They then made two A2 prints and provided a transparent overlay for the MM print to show the areas of (very) subtle difference.
What aspect of sharpening does the MM not require: input, output or creative/content sharpening?
We all understand eliminating the AA filter means input sharpening methods to counter AA filtering effects are unnecessary.
Yet the demoasicing interpolation algorithms must estimate edge transitions since digital information is inherently discontinuous. Also, pixels are either pure white or pure black. Generating shades of gray (tonality) requires estimating data you don't have (everything in-between black and white). Obviously the data estimates during raw rendering are very good. But they are not perfect. In every other camera the loss in detail due to the imperfections is reduced by input sharpening. Neither effect is related to color-filter-arrays. They are arise from being forced to model a continuous state-of-nature with discontinuous information.
Creative or content sharpening is one way to selectively enhance contrast. The aesthetic utility of this type of sharpening can not be evaluated since judgement of the results is subjective.
Output sharpening compensates for interpolation issues with printing devices. This has nothing to do with the camera at all. Different printing devices benefit from different sharpening.
I do not contend images from cameras without AA filters require the same amount of sharpening or the sharpening methods used for cameras with AA filters. I prefer systems with no or very weak AA filters.
Nor do I doubt content/creative sharpening is unnecessary with MM images.
I am puzzled how no sharpening whatsoever would be superior to appropriately sharpened images for any digital image.
The point is that, since the M-Monochrom has no color filter array (CFA), there is no need for demosaicing, which means that each captured pixel gives one output pixel. Therefore, there are no artifacts resulting from combining of neighboring data that exults from demosaicing, which rsults in substantially better resolution. That also means that capture sharpening is not necessary. You can google "M-Monochrom" and "demosaicing" and find lots of explanations of this.What aspect of sharpening does the MM not require: input, output or creative/content sharpening?...Yet the demoasicing interpolation algorithms must estimate edge transitions since digital information is inherently discontinuous...