Ruined said:
sagittariansrock said:
I am not sure I understand what the post is about.
What is the reason for your frustration? Are you feeling bad for the lenses? Are you feeling bad for the people who make the wrong choices?
I don't see anyone else who is suffering from this sharpness addiction- I am sure no one is losing a client or a competition because his amazing shots weren't taken with an L lens or because his lens has low MTF values!
The 50L still sells well, and commands a high price. If it were more popular it would be even more expensive. And those new IS primes- thankfully they got 'ignored' and the prices came down. Now you can have all your limbs AND a prime with IS.
Objective tests matter to a small minority of people. Don't get frustrated- just ignore them.
The frustration stems from two things:
1) It is a shame that some write off lenses because of sharpness tests, as some of the real gear treasures aren't the sharpest lenses. A lot of folks missing out on the good stuff...
2) From one that likes the look of the 50L/85L, I fear Canon might start prioritizing sharpness over bokeh in future lens design for instance so lenses can get higher review scores.
2)???? But Canon nailed both sharpness AND bokeh (and all the ephemeral feelie stuff) on the 85mm 1.2. You are lumping the wrong lenses together.
I'd have dropped the $$$ on the 50L in a heartbeat if it had close to the wide-open sharpness of the 85. Yes, I based part of my decision on information gathered from the Web, but also from a friend and commercial/wedding/portrait master of photography who uses the ef 50mm 1.4 instead of the 1.2 because, not only does she save a little of her large equipment budget, but because the 1.2 did not work for her. She is one of the most dynamic, fast moving photographers I've ever seen. She is happy to slow down and use her 85mm 1.2, but she thinks the 50mm 1.2 just is not reliable enough nor "magical" enough to hassle with.
Granted, this is the viewpoint of a very demanding, highly paid (~$10k per job) photographer, so it might be biased towards performance and results.
This thread seems to be partly some kind of frustration with a lack of sharpness in very expensive lenses, frustration that is being spun by self-deception into a disdain for those who stick to their guns and demand that performance matches price. Another common theme in the negative posts here is simple gear envy. (Remember it really IS how you use it.)
I had the ef 35mm 1.4 L, found it to be soft wide-open and with CA problems up to f/5.6, sold it at a small loss, and then bought a Sigma 35mm Art. Great decision. Had an ef 85mm 1.8, found it wanting, so bought the 1.2 L. ANOTHER great decision.
As for what photographers used and settled for in the 70's, well, heck, people settled for a lot of things before they were improved.
Of COURSE we are going to zoom in on our photos on a monitor--that's what all our processing software instructs us to do. So, we see that certain lenses and cameras produce great results at full size, others not so great. Having excellent sharpness allows for tighter crops, bigger prints.
And you can always convincingly soften an image. You CANNOT always sharpen a soft image and maintain IQ.
I think my frustration with people who are happy to saw away with a dull knife has been vented, thank you.
BTW, GMCPhotgraphics--lovely shot of the puffin.