AndyPiper
Established
Mountain ELMAR (105mm f/6.3) - but who's counting?
8^)
No such thing as a camera that is "too sharp". I'll take any amount of sharpness the camera can deliver. If I want soft, all it takes is a slow shutter speed or a Summar lens.
The technical term for a "hot" oversharpened edge is a "sharpening halo" - not that it's all that much more technical.
But what looks overly-sharpened in a 100% pixel view on the screen often just looks clean and crisp in a 250-300 ppi print. The printing process adds its own softening to the image.
Digital photography guru Bruce Fraser says that digital images (whether film or sensor based) should look "crunchy" at 100% when they are properly sharpened for print output.
http://www.creativepro.com/printerfriendly/story/20357.html
8^)
No such thing as a camera that is "too sharp". I'll take any amount of sharpness the camera can deliver. If I want soft, all it takes is a slow shutter speed or a Summar lens.
The technical term for a "hot" oversharpened edge is a "sharpening halo" - not that it's all that much more technical.
But what looks overly-sharpened in a 100% pixel view on the screen often just looks clean and crisp in a 250-300 ppi print. The printing process adds its own softening to the image.
Digital photography guru Bruce Fraser says that digital images (whether film or sensor based) should look "crunchy" at 100% when they are properly sharpened for print output.
http://www.creativepro.com/printerfriendly/story/20357.html