jOhO
Senior Member
Hi JoHo,
What you mean that you don't see why it shouldn't or should perform in a studio?
ar yes.. typo.. sorry! ;p
i meant, shouldn't.
Hi JoHo,
What you mean that you don't see why it shouldn't or should perform in a studio?
Isisaxon,
Good question. hmm i'm actually still on doubt whether can it produce a good studio image, as i can see most of the samples is mostly cover on sports.
as for the resolution i do understand there's some capped in blowing up the picture for a 12mp camera. But my next concern is if Nikon brings out an competitive model against Canon 1Ds MkIII. Will the such high resolution a a FF sensor produce a good result.
I used to own a D2X, Studio result is quite good, but just noisy. Blow up max reasonable print size is about A3 size for RAW
What do you guys think?
Oh any samples of studio images that you all found in the web taken from D3?
ar yes.. typo.. sorry! ;p
i meant, shouldn't.
Here are some non-sports links from pre-production D3. It shows that you have not been following the postings.. ;p
http://cliffmautner.typepad.com/my_weblog/2007/09/ok-its-after-1a.html
http://www.craigsactions.com/Tips/NikonD3FirstTest.html
http://press.nikonusa.com/2007/09/nikon_d3_sample_images.php
This link scroll all the way down for the portrait of the fireman by Joe McNally. I'll link it here..
Anyway, always remember, when you blow an image big, you are not going to view it up close. Many times, in the case of D2X, the sensor has outresolved the optics. IMO, 12mp is convenient for storage and editing. It is already larger than a 16-base 35mm film scan.
Otherwise, if you really need the resolution, I am speculating that Nikon might release a >20mp D3X end of next year or early 2009. If Nikon maintains the same pixel density as D300's sensor to give 12mp for DX, FX would give 27mp, but I guess it might probably be something in between to give maybe 10MP DX and 22MP FX to give a better noise performance than the D300. It will definitely be slower than D3 and you will have to sacrifice some high ISO performance.
If you look at the 100% image of the fireman, you willl find that the limiting resolution still seems to be the optics. If that's the case, you would not get any better image even if you up the MP count. So at the end of the day, it did made me think if it's really necessary to go for higher MP count. Maybe it would be useful if you do cropping a lot but the price difference between a D3 and a D3X might be able to get you a spare D300 body. ;p
Isisaxon,
Sorry to bother! how do you really tells the different in resolution limiting in Optics and MP?
why not? its a good choice.
you can use longer lenses, greater field of view due to no crop, and most importantly, increase in depth of field at a given working distance due to fullframe.
:dunno:
increase in DOF? I think it's the other way round?
Whatever is DOF increase/decrease is very subjective.
Isisaxon,
Good question. hmm i'm actually still on doubt whether can it produce a good studio image, as i can see most of the samples is mostly cover on sports.
as for the resolution i do understand there's some capped in blowing up the picture for a 12mp camera. But my next concern is if Nikon brings out an competitive model against Canon 1Ds MkIII. Will the such high resolution a a FF sensor produce a good result.
I used to own a D2X, Studio result is quite good, but just noisy. Blow up max reasonable print size is about A3 size for RAW
What do you guys think?
Oh any samples of studio images that you all found in the web taken from D3?
at a given working distance, using a film or a 1.5x crop factor cam, depth of field is different. i'm too lazy to do the math, but there is more depth of field on the FF, and greater field of view at the same time
at a len's min foc distance, film will have more dof than apc as well
Max A3 for raw? I completely disagree. We have printed above and beyond A3 with great results. If you know how to use it, the D2X cant print at A1 just as easily as A3 with no serious issue.
Max A3 for raw? I completely disagree. We have printed above and beyond A3 with great results. If you know how to use it, the D2X cant print at A1 just as easily as A3 with no serious issue.
at a given working distance, using a film or a 1.5x crop factor cam, depth of field is different. i'm too lazy to do the math, but there is more depth of field on the FF, and greater field of view at the same time
at a len's min foc distance, film will have more dof than apc as well
Sensor size will not affect DOF. It is never a variable in the calculation. DOF will only change when you vary the focal length to capture the SAME image on a different sensor size. Same focal length, f-stop, camera to subject distance on a different format will still get same DOF.
Sensor size will not affect DOF. It is never a variable in the calculation. DOF will only change when you vary the focal length to capture the SAME image on a different sensor size. Same focal length, f-stop, camera to subject distance on a different format will still get same DOF.
I think we need to qualify the above statement.To put it simply, if the subject iw captured at the same size, DOF will be greater on the DX sensor produced image.
Some like more DOF, some need less DOF (i.e. news). So we cannot just say an increase/decrease is better.
For me, I would prefer more, and les DOF at the same time because ofthe variety of things I photograph. (headache)
Wrong! Sensor size is a critical factor of determining DOF.
Just an example using the calculator here: http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/depth-of-field.htm
Same image, same focal lenght, same aperture size but different sensor size...
Subject distance: 2m
50mm f/2.8
DX format: DOF=0.193m
FX format: DOF=0.290m
... DOF is different.
There are 2 other factor which we usually assume constant which will affect DOF. They are print size and viewing distance. Read the article I linked above and you will understand.
BC
Not pixel size lah... pixel size does not come into the equation.I think it's not sensor size per se but rather the circle of confusion determined by the pixel size. Anyway, are we getting out of topic? ;p