Gabriel M.A.
My Red Dot Glows For You
jaapv said:I'm with you! Don't buy Tri-X but desaturate!! Levels sliders of the world unite!!!😀 😀 😀
No room for the 257th tone, or beyond! Tri-X 😛pft: how quaint :angel:
jaapv said:I'm with you! Don't buy Tri-X but desaturate!! Levels sliders of the world unite!!!😀 😀 😀
Socke said:Would you keep a Porsche which is limited to max 80 mph due to new tire technology? Especialy when nobody told you so until the first owners blew a tire at 120?
I can except a couple of flawed circuit boards which are replaced, but a severe lack in image quality, and the magenta cast is one, is a bit too much.
If they'd comunicated that
a) due to compromises made in favour of edge to edge sharpness the camera may need an additional IR block filter
and
b) the camera may not work as expected with third party and uncoded Leica lenses
this would have been fair.
After all a lot of Leicas customers are used to digital cameras by now and have expectations which are met by other digital cameras.
Porsche, another flawed product: you can't fit the whole family in there *and* grandma at the same time. I mean, come on! If I'm going to spend $50,000 I want to put all I can put in there just like I can put on that less expensive Chevy Suburban.Socke said:Would you keep a Porsche which is limited to max 80 mph due to new tire technology? Especialy when nobody told you so until the first owners blew a tire at 120?
You can't get color with either. Sorry, they're still onto you 🙂Gabriel M.A. said:They turned around at the whisper of "orthochromatic" and "panchromatic" from air control 😱
Gabriel M.A. said:Porsche, another flawed product: you can't fit the whole family in there *and* grandma at the same time. I mean, come on! If I'm going to spend $50,000 I want to put all I can put in there just like I can put on that less expensive Chevy Suburban.
What do you mean I have to buy an extra whatchamathing to haul with my Porsche?!? I'm paying tens of thousands of dollars already!
That's why this uninformed (let's leave it at that) consumer says that B&W film is fundamentally flawed with its lack of color rendition 🙄varjag said:You can't get color with either.
jaapv said:That is reasonable, but I do not agree the magenta cast is a severe lack in image quality. To call it that will disqualify a number of other digital camera's and more specifically a number of high-level MF digital backs from being good photographic tools. I see it as an inherent quirk of digital photography, related to the choices made regarding edge contrast, dynamic range and filter type and thickness,
Couldn't agree with you more. There are more legs to a cat than the eye can see.varjag said:Difference in opinions is unavoidable as are discussions, let's just resort from trivializing each other's opinion to the point of ridicule. Peace 🙂
Rhodie said:Therein lies the problem - you need another camera to make good on the M8's defficiencies.
Rhodie said:I gather from the photographer that the magenta cast is not readilly seen in ambient daylight and up until the event -early November- the issue was unknown to him. Anyway the filters are not yet available.
Harry Lime said:But let me ask you this. Do you honestly believe there would have been any less furvor or hand wringging if Leica had told everyone upfront that they are going to need to use an IR filter and have their lenses encoded, because there is no other way to make the camera work? Not because Leica is a bunch of hacks or they didn't do their home work, but because it is physically impossible, unless they come up with a way to change the laws of physics?
After Porsche offered to give me a set of free tires and a 30% discount on fuel? Certainly... and hooray to flawed analogies 😉Socke said:Would you keep a Porsche which is limited to max 80 mph due to new tire technology? Especialy when nobody told you so until the first owners blew a tire at 120?
Harry Lime said:Not because Leica is a bunch of hacks or they didn't do their home work, but because it is physically impossible, unless they come up with a way to change the laws of physics?
They didn't - partly they side-stepped them with a smaller sensor which allowed them to use a thicker IR filter. Then they used a proportionally thicker filter (wrt sensor size) than the M8, thus trading more colour fringing for less magenta cast. And even then it has some purple blacks - just not blatant enough to draw a lot of attention.fgianni said:Exactly with physical law stops them putting a slightly thicker IR filter in front of the sensor?
The R-D1 has its IR sensitivity well under control, maybe Leica shound ask Epson how they did manage to break the laws of physics? 😀
mfunnell said:They didn't - partly they side-stepped them with a smaller sensor which allowed them to use a thicker IR filter. Then they used a proportionally thicker filter (wrt sensor size) than the M8, thus trading more colour fringing for less magenta cast. And even then it has some purple blacks - just not blatant enough to draw a lot of attention.
Different trade-offs is all.
...Mike
ywenz said:Wow japp, you're equating the magenta cast to be a property of digital photography as much as dynamic range is? I know you love your M8... but wow.. well, hey more the power to ya man!
The laws of interference. IR filters, unless you choose thick absorption filters, which is undesirable for obvious reasons, are dichroitic interference filters.Those are senstive to incidence angle. On a RF (it alsways comes down to the same thing) a steep angle of incidence will lead to a blocking of visible red light, hence a cyan shift hence cyan vignetting. A sensor filter would change its vignetting according to focus distance, less so to focal length, as opposed to a filter in front of the lens. This makes a filter in front of the sensor very difficult to correct in software.fgianni said:Exactly with physical law stops them putting a slightly thicker IR filter in front of the sensor?
The R-D1 has its IR sensitivity well under control, maybe Leica shound ask Epson how they did manage to break the laws of physics? 😀
jaapv said:A sensor filter would change its vignetting according to focus distance, less so to focal length, as opposed to a filter in front of the lens. This makes a filter in front of the sensor very difficult to correct in software.