privatebydesign said:Sporgon said:Lee Jay said:neuroanatomist said:For me, 'everyday shooting/viewing' doesn't comprise tripod mounted static subjects cropped to 100%. If that's your usual method/subject, then bravo – your results have validity as far as comparing teleconverters vs. pixel interpolation for increased resolution, which is certainly not the topic at hand.
You don't need a tripod and static subjects to get little or no relevant movement during an exposure. Good technique, fast shutter speeds, and IS can all combine to get pixel-level performance equal to the best you can get in the lab, and I do it regularly. I shoot a lot of airplanes and often have final images that are 1:1 pixel crops from a crop camera with a 2x teleconverter mounted.
You are so wrong there. Granted you may; or may not. For the bayer pattern of pixels to describe everything accurately any microscopic movement and your four three colour arrays will receive confused information. Frequently the data from a hand held shot can looked clogged up - if you're going to be really picky about it, and that is infantisimal movement. IS does not produce the same data as a genuinely stable shooting platform, and remember just because it's on a tripod doesn't mean it's totally stable.
So when you say "good technique, fast shutter + IS = as good as in the lab" ( by the 'lab' I presume you mean rock steady platform etc etc.) then that statement is both misleading and wrong.
I agree.
Well, then you're both wrong.
What a tripod buys you is reliability. But I often shoot shots for photogrammetry that are handheld out of necessity and they are pixel-sharp. Shooting at 200mm and 1/3200th is one way to do that. The other way is to shoot many shots using IS and good technique along with modest shutter speeds around 1/f and some will be near-perfect and some will be soft due to motion blur.
As I said, I regularly produce 1:1 pixel crops for final images and it's fairly common for me not to have enough pixels left over. That's why I want a higher pixel density camera for when I'm focal length limited.
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