ahsanford said:
privatebydesign said:
In other words, even when we are pretty anal about it clicking the lens corrections option doesn't have a noticeable negative impact on output at most reasonable sizes.
Yep. It's only
critical for me to hit the LCP when I am correcting lens vignetting on wide-open shooting or if I've got an expectation of a very very straight line in the shot -- architecture, ocean at the horizon, etc.
But not being able to tell the 24-70 f/2.8L I vs. newer glass, I would disagree. I've never shot the 24-70 f/2.8L II, but my 24-70 f/4L IS absolutely outclassed my 24-70 f/2.8L I on a same-aperture tripod test, esp. in the corners.
- A
Disagree as much as you like, as always I have comparative images to back up my assertions. But I was only talking about the 24-70 f2.8 MkI and MkII, for instance I owned the 16-35 f4 IS and that was a substantial improvement in IQ over any other ultra wide zoom Canon had made to that point, it blows the various 16-35 f2.8's (and 17-40 f4) out of the water!
But back to the 24-70 f2.8's, after looking at hundreds of 100% crops like these two I realised the only differences I was seeing in actual real world images were to do with the point of focus, not the lens IQ. I did comparisons at all focal lengths and all apertures, nothing convince me to get a MkII.
Initially the right hand images looks much sharper, but open the file at full size and look at the trunk and the left image is sharper........