Probably mostly around the edges. There is alot of lens vignette on those lenses. If you are coming from a cropped sensor camera, you probably never noticed much vignette because you were only using the center of the lens. With a full frame, the edges of your photos will be less sharp and have more lens vignette than before.Vaz said:I did a bunch of shooting with the 50 1.4 and after applying the lens correction in lightroom the images would get significantly brighter.
itsnotmeyouknow said:I've downloaded it (mac). It works fine and is basically a DNG converter within LR4. The images are converted from CR2 to DNG whereas my CR2 from my MK II stayed as CR2. It does save a step though
Stephen Melvin said:itsnotmeyouknow said:I've downloaded it (mac). It works fine and is basically a DNG converter within LR4. The images are converted from CR2 to DNG whereas my CR2 from my MK II stayed as CR2. It does save a step though
What? That's ridiculous. What is it with Adobe and their DuNG, anyway? So in other words, LR 4.1 doesn't support the Mk III any better than LR 4.0. Or LR 3, for that matter.
itsnotmeyouknow said:is basically a DNG converter within LR4
Alker said:Yep works fine...
No idea why this rumor came up about DNG conversion.
Maybe this:
One of the import options is "Copy as DNG," but if you don't choose it, by default it seems to leave 5DIII CR2s as they were
Alker said:Yep works fine...
No idea why this rumor came up about DNG conversion.
Maybe this:
One of the import options is "Copy as DNG," but if you don't choose it, by default it seems to leave 5DIII CR2s as they were