teo
Well-known
redhead... 🙂
I hear this all the time, but I actually believe you can tell a lot about how sharp a lens is from web pictures. The original argument was that web images can only be viewed at 72dpi
I think the original argument is that when any and all structures smaller than a 5x5 square get jammed into a single pixel, a lot of things seem sharper than they are in print.
It's a very similar reason to why small prints are more forgiving sharpness-wise than large ones.
I think the sharpness of lenses basically cannot be evaluated on screen (without zooming in, which then again creates another unrealistic viewing scenario). The only thing that is even less suitable for on-screen evaluation is microcontrast.
M4cr0s, sharpness definitely varies with focal length with a lot of lenses - the Zeiss ze/zf SLR 50mm f1.4 and 85mm f1.4 planars are both quite soft at closer distances wide open, but become much better at longer distances. Zeiss even mentions this in the official brochures!
Nothing wrong with that flower pic though, lovely rendering for such a little digital cam!
I didn't post this originally because it's a bit overexposed but by popular request here's "The Waitress".
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I think the waitress is been well exposed now! 🙄
I'm sorry but you did feed me the line.
I've no idea if one can appreciate sharpness on the interweb but,,, I do find the OP's photo, actually, looks a bit odd, a bit like wearing someone else's glasses to read the menu ... the subject looks fine but the rest of the restaurant looks strangely blurry; not to my taste, sorry
interesting...i like that effect...
Something I forgot to mention was that because I had the camera in silent mode none of the people in the pics knew I was taking photos. They assumed I was just playing with my new camera. As you can tell from the pics I was very close to them. Talk about stealth!
I was holding it up to my eye but since I had just told them I'd had it less than 2 days and never took it from my eye during all the shots they assumed I was just enjoying the hybrid viewfinder. If anyone had heard even one shutter click I think things would have been different.
One of the guys even said "you should take her picture" after the waitress left.
I didn't post this originally because it's a bit overexposed but by popular request here's "The Waitress".
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I think the "soft" at F/2.0 is really a myth more than anything else. Yet, there's a possible explanation. At close focusing distances (less than about 1 meter) it is kind of soft, mostly due to various aberrations. At "normal" distances I find this thing more than acceptably sharp, even compared to my near optically perfect macros.