5Ds or 5Ds R for Studio and Portrait Work
You can easily add a bit of gaussian blur in PS, but you can't remove it. If 50 MP is a bit overkill for your normal production, and you want to worry less about addressing moiré in post capture processing, then the S should be fine. If you may want to squeeze everything out of 50 MP and are prepared to fuss a bit more in PS, then go with the R. I'm in the latter group. Typical trade-off.
I'm also still using the 5dmkii (mkiii had nothing to offer for me), so I assume you output larger than say 17x20" at 360 dpi (Epson inkjet). How large? That will tell you whether/how much 50 MP is overkill.
Second, do you have lenses that can resolve the sensor? That is a MTF question.
Alternatively, you can stop down and induce diffraction blur that will be equivalent to the AA filter. I have seen f/6.7 and f/11 cited as point where diffraction will limit what the sensor can capture. Portraiture is usually shot very open, so you may run into moiré problems. Studio product shots may have wider f-stop/DOF requirements.
I'm also still using the 5dmkii (mkiii had nothing to offer for me), so I assume you output larger than say 17x20" at 360 dpi (Epson inkjet). How large? That will tell you whether/how much 50 MP is overkill.
Second, do you have lenses that can resolve the sensor? That is a MTF question.
Alternatively, you can stop down and induce diffraction blur that will be equivalent to the AA filter. I have seen f/6.7 and f/11 cited as point where diffraction will limit what the sensor can capture. Portraiture is usually shot very open, so you may run into moiré problems. Studio product shots may have wider f-stop/DOF requirements.
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