briansquibb said:
Have you fogotten the 8-15 then?
1D4 is top camera in all respects except maybe the 1Ds3
Since when is a fisheye a substitute for a rectilinear lens? Plus, if I wanted the fisheye look, I'd want the capability for circular fisheye. Can I get that with the 8-15mm on APS-H.
The 1DIV is a compromise camera, because the APS-H is a compromise sensor. Canon has admitted that in two ways. First, by acknowledging that APS-H was needed for higher frame rates not achievable with FF, and stating that APS-H was the largest sensor that could be produced by a single stamping pass (at the time) for cost effectiveness. Second, by releasing the 1D X - FF with 12 fps - merging the lines and abandoning APS-H in the flagship clearly says they've engineered beyond the need for compromise.
briansquibb said:
The whole point of ff is that for a given lens then ff will give the best OOF blur - as you are not saddled with DOF that you can't use and OOF blur you can't achieve
FF will give the
most OOF blur, but that's not bokeh. Bokeh is quality, not quantity. Nothing so far, here or elsewhere, has demonstrated that the bokeh is better with FF. If you're going to shoot all bodies at the same aperture, that's meaningless for comparing bokeh, and we already know that the larger the sensor the more OOF blur, so what would a bunch of f/2.8 shots prove?
An example - say you've got an 85mm f/1.8 and are shooting a family of four in an outdoor setting. You have a 5DII and a 7D, and plenty of room. You need a DoF of ~0.3 m to get all four subjects in focus. To frame the family with the FF camera, you need to be about 4 m away. That means f/2.8 will give you the DoF you need. Or, you could use the 7D, back up to 6.4 m for the same framing, and set the aperture to f/1.8 for the same DoF (granted, a different perspective). Now, you've got the same framing, same DoF, same amount of OOF blur - so, which camera gives the better bokeh?
It might be the 7D...on the 7D the lens is wide open, so OOF highlights will be round, whereas on the 5DII you'd be at f/2.8 and seeing octagonal highlights from the aperture blades. But then again, the 85/1.8 will have less longitudinal CA at f/2.8 than wide open, so FF is better there.