TWI by Dustin Abbott said:jcarapet said:I need to see more examples out of this. In their comparison I am not seeing a significant improvement in sharpness on the side by side comparison. Beautiful regardless.
The only shot that stands out to me is the crop of the two coins. Look at the smaller, bronze looking coin in the lower right. Sharpness is night and day there.
My biggest personal question is going to be whether the new 35L retains the excellent drawing of the former. The Sigma ART is much sharper, but it is debatable whether it produces better pictures (as a whole). I want the new 35L II to retain the former while adding the sharpness of the Sigma.
infared said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:jcarapet said:I need to see more examples out of this. In their comparison I am not seeing a significant improvement in sharpness on the side by side comparison. Beautiful regardless.
The only shot that stands out to me is the crop of the two coins. Look at the smaller, bronze looking coin in the lower right. Sharpness is night and day there.
My biggest personal question is going to be whether the new 35L retains the excellent drawing of the former. The Sigma ART is much sharper, but it is debatable whether it produces better pictures (as a whole). I want the new 35L II to retain the former while adding the sharpness of the Sigma.
Yes....I think that the new Canon will have less sharpness compared to the Sigma...but the Canon will have much better bokeh.... I am just guessing from what I have seen so far. I have the Sigma..and have no intention of owning this new lens (because of the cost..GULP!).....but I cannot wait to see the comparison of those two. It will be quite fascinating to see them head to head!!!! Both great pieces of glass.
GMCPhotographics said:infared said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:jcarapet said:I need to see more examples out of this. In their comparison I am not seeing a significant improvement in sharpness on the side by side comparison. Beautiful regardless.
The only shot that stands out to me is the crop of the two coins. Look at the smaller, bronze looking coin in the lower right. Sharpness is night and day there.
My biggest personal question is going to be whether the new 35L retains the excellent drawing of the former. The Sigma ART is much sharper, but it is debatable whether it produces better pictures (as a whole). I want the new 35L II to retain the former while adding the sharpness of the Sigma.
Yes....I think that the new Canon will have less sharpness compared to the Sigma...but the Canon will have much better bokeh.... I am just guessing from what I have seen so far. I have the Sigma..and have no intention of owning this new lens (because of the cost..GULP!).....but I cannot wait to see the comparison of those two. It will be quite fascinating to see them head to head!!!! Both great pieces of glass.
Yep and the Sigma can't focus for tosh...even the canon 35L is better a focussing...hey even the 50L is better than that Sigma.
chromophore said:My observations:
The biggest thing that stood out for me was the reduction in chromatic aberration. I didn't even compare the sharpness of the images--what I noticed was a significant reduction in green and magenta fringing in the out-of-focus areas. However, it is not entirely absent. In the close-up of the laptop image, you can still see some magenta fringing on the highlight; in the battery image, you can notice a slight amount of green.
It is impossible to evaluate or compare the peripheral sharpness of the lens from these images because you cannot determine if the focus point is exactly the same across the shots. I have no doubt the new lens is sharper, but I am saying you can't really tell from these sample shots. Ideally, we would want a 100% image of a test chart.
Field curvature is not possible to evaluate with these images, either.
Until we can see more sample images and get a better sense of the characteristics of this lens, I would not jump at buying one. $1800 is rather high and it is definitely going to go down after six months.
e_honda said:The 3rd comparison pics looks like a bokeh comparison, and it's somewhat more subjective as to which one is better. They look pretty similar IMO.
chromophore said:For what it's worth, if Canon could redesign the 85L II with this BR technology, it would make for an absolutely stunning lens. 85mm + /1.2 + almost no chromatic aberration = bokeh monster.
Excuse me while I wipe the drool off my keyboard now.
Which is significantly less than an 85/1.4 Otusinfared said:chromophore said:For what it's worth, if Canon could redesign the 85L II with this BR technology, it would make for an absolutely stunning lens. 85mm + /1.2 + almost no chromatic aberration = bokeh monster.
Excuse me while I wipe the drool off my keyboard now.
It would be wonderous and only cost $3000!!!
jcarapet said:I need to see more examples out of this. In their comparison I am not seeing a significant improvement in sharpness on the side by side comparison. Beautiful regardless.
chromophore said:For what it's worth, if Canon could redesign the 85L II with this BR technology, it would make for an absolutely stunning lens. 85mm + /1.2 + almost no chromatic aberration = bokeh monster.
Excuse me while I wipe the drool off my keyboard now.
romanr74 said:this is a funny forum. people complain when images from canon sensors cannot be pushed a gazillion stops withouth increasing noise. but then people find it completely useless to have improved corner sharpenss in the new 35mm. but the nikon 14-24 is much better anyway because of its fantastic corner sharpenss accross the zoom range...