I hope that was understandable. I never realize how long these posts are until I've actually posted them. They always end up longer than I expect.
I should caveat my last post with one thing. When I say pixel size doesn't matter, I do mean pretty strictly in context of noise, pixel size doesn't matter much. I don't want anyone to misinterpret that to mean that pixel size doesn't matter at all. On the contrary, pixel size does matter. Depending on what you shoot, it can matter a whole hell of a LOT! Pixel size determines resolving power (spatial resolution). When your photographing landscapes, birds or wildlife at a distance, even sports at a distance, you can always use more pixels. More pixels means more detail.
This should actually give even better context to the reasons why larger total sensor area is important when you are not reach-limited. If you can frame your subjects as you want to frame them, a larger sensor with smaller pixels means the best of both worlds...you can gather more total light, AND you can resolve more detail. There is really nothing wrong with that. Even if we eventually get to the point where sensors are oversampling lenses more often than not (which, unless we eventually see the "average" lens quality equal the quality the Otus delivers at fast apertures (at least f/4, even up to f/2.8), is rather likely), it's actually better to oversample than to undersample.
If we can oversample our images by about two fold at the lens' ideal aperture, then I think we would finally reach a point where AA filters would fundamentally be UNnecessary. The lens would be doing the necessary high frequency blurring for us, there would never be a chance (with the possible exception of the Otus Next
) that the lens would resolve detail fine enough to create moire patterns and aliasing with the sensor. At that point, it would simply be a matter of practice to always downsample our images by a factor of two (at least, obviously significantly more for publication online) to get the ideal result. In the case of print, sensors with that kind of resolution (and were talking some pretty serious resolution here, 120-150mp FF at least) would be natively producing quality results that don't need to be upscaled (which effectively produces similar results to a sensor that oversamples a lens) unless your printing at some pretty extreme sizes...40x30 or larger (however even then...you wouldn't need to upscale as much, so it's a wash.)
I should caveat my last post with one thing. When I say pixel size doesn't matter, I do mean pretty strictly in context of noise, pixel size doesn't matter much. I don't want anyone to misinterpret that to mean that pixel size doesn't matter at all. On the contrary, pixel size does matter. Depending on what you shoot, it can matter a whole hell of a LOT! Pixel size determines resolving power (spatial resolution). When your photographing landscapes, birds or wildlife at a distance, even sports at a distance, you can always use more pixels. More pixels means more detail.
This should actually give even better context to the reasons why larger total sensor area is important when you are not reach-limited. If you can frame your subjects as you want to frame them, a larger sensor with smaller pixels means the best of both worlds...you can gather more total light, AND you can resolve more detail. There is really nothing wrong with that. Even if we eventually get to the point where sensors are oversampling lenses more often than not (which, unless we eventually see the "average" lens quality equal the quality the Otus delivers at fast apertures (at least f/4, even up to f/2.8), is rather likely), it's actually better to oversample than to undersample.
If we can oversample our images by about two fold at the lens' ideal aperture, then I think we would finally reach a point where AA filters would fundamentally be UNnecessary. The lens would be doing the necessary high frequency blurring for us, there would never be a chance (with the possible exception of the Otus Next
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