RAKAMRAK said:I was wondering whether and how much the distance from the subject affects sharpness of the image taken by different lenses (on same sensor). Is there any website or source where such information may be available for Canon lenses?
Pi said:It does. Use a lens at 1m, then at infinity - it is a different lens really. I have noticed this with my 17-55 - much better at 2-3m than at infinity.
Many people test lenses at close distances and make far reaching conclusions; and this is wrong.
Pi said:It does. Use a lens at 1m, then at infinity - it is a different lens really. I have noticed this with my 17-55 - much better at 2-3m than at infinity.
Many people test lenses at close distances and make far reaching conclusions; and this is wrong.
East Wind Photography said:Maybe you are referring to resolving ability. That is not sharpness. Sharpness is created by having a stronger light and dark along lines in an image. More light means more sharpness. Less light gives it more softness.
Pi said:East Wind Photography said:Maybe you are referring to resolving ability. That is not sharpness. Sharpness is created by having a stronger light and dark along lines in an image. More light means more sharpness. Less light gives it more softness.
There is no much difference. Sharpness is a loose term for MTF-50 or so. Resolution is another loose term for lower MTF, like MTF-10 to 20.
East Wind Photography said:Actually it IS all about the differences. You can sharpen an image in Photoshop but you cannot increase the resolution of the image. They are two different things measured in complete different ways.
RAKAMRAK said:So it is not "sharpness" but resolving ability. So let me rephrase my question - is there any source to learn about canon (many or most) lens's variable "resolving ability" with distance from the subject. And I am talking about different distances like 2-5 meters, 5-10 meters, 10-20 meters etc. (or there counterparts in feet).
To put it in a slightly different language what I am trying to know is if it is true that every prime lens is optimized (in terms of resolving power) for a particular (or small range) of distance from the subject (not sure how to put it in terms of zoom lenses) and if so is there any source (that you know of) to know which canon lens is optimized for which distance (or range of distance) from the subject?
Thanks for the reference to "atmospheric distortion", I just looked it up. No, I am not talking about that.
Pi said:East Wind Photography said:Actually it IS all about the differences. You can sharpen an image in Photoshop but you cannot increase the resolution of the image. They are two different things measured in complete different ways.
All of this is unrelated to the OP - the question was clear enough.
We are not talking what you can create in PS - we are talking about the IQ of the lens and the sensor. And no, they are not measured in completely different ways - all that is measured is the MTF curve, usually by the slanted edge method (which actually computes the MTF using the Fourier transform). The rest is words.
If one goes through the detailed lens descriptions the term "floating elements" crops up. Thats a way to deal with the different needs of extreme close focus and infinity - move some elements around as if it where a zoom lens, but instead of changing the focal length its the aberration control that gets adapted. (Well, IF/RF adds another layer of complexity and there may be partial overlap, but the idea stays). Most of the time you find that in macros.Mr Bean said:On the other hand, my 100mm macro is better suited at close work.
East Wind Photography said:No actually the original question was about distance affecting sharpness of a lens...and the answer is quite clear. Distance does not affect sharpness. The amount of light affects sharpness. Quality of optics and alignment affects resolution of a lens. What the camera can resolve is up to the sensor. The lens resolution should be relatively fixed..but that is not always the case because no one can make a perfect lens.
RAKAMRAK said:I was wondering whether and how much the distance from the subject affects sharpness of the image taken by different lenses (on same sensor). Is there any website or source where such information may be available for Canon lenses?