And what use is any image if we do not view it? And to view it, we must enlarge it to viewing size. Since the cropped image is smaller, it must be enlarged more to be the same viewing size, and more enlargement reduces the resolution in that image. If printing both at same size, then like instead of printing at maybe 300 dpi, same size is only 200 dpi (assuming 1.5x crop). If that enlargement is carried too far, it becomes a pretty sorry image. Size is very important. Dpi is about inches.
That's where I thought you and I were speaking about... two different things. Yes, for prints, also crop room to adjust an image composition, there's a big difference.
I was only referring to the images themself, and given the same quality of the sensor, the image quality is the same, just cropped. And how in theory, using the sweet spot in the center of a lens, could make the images actually better on a crop camera.
But yes, I agree 100%, if I was making an 8x10 print of an image, the full frame would have more pixels and be physically better quality.
I don't print much. I think more in terms of digital on computers and news or functional, not art prints. I can see how two different purposes would have a different quality and size demands. I just counted and I have nine of my photos printed. Most of those were free offers for a sample print, like a canvas border-less, small poster, or 8x10. I'm not sure that anything hanging framed, is something I paid for. Oh wait, one panorama that's 36x12. (the frame was a dollar at a church sale)
I don't own a color printer, well I do, a laser, but that's no good for images. If someone wants one of my photos, as a print, I put it up on Fine Art America and let them pick everything. My other use is Editorial/News which is for news use, not for prints. Or for websites, where a 12MP image is pretty large.
Like the question, what camera should I buy and what lenses? "What are you going to shoot and do with it?"
I think we agree, I was just speaking from a different perspective.
ps I just bought a Canon RP. I had a 1Ds for a short time and I was impressed with the color and depth of the few images I took with it, before I sold it. Came as part of an equipment purchase, a "deal", too good for me, plus the buffer was too small for bursts. I'm hoping that it's the full frame part, not that the 1Ds was somehow different than a new R sensor?
The reason I decided to move to an R from all my ##-D cameras (CF cards) was 26MP and the camera is able to write to memory cards, high-end UHS-II SD card, from the buffer faster than it can take new photos. With something a little less, I'll still have an 80 something buffer. Yes, 5fps/4 with AF active but I also seldom shoot big bursts, however I do shoot one after another.
4 frames per second? Good enough for me.
Nope I don't do fine art, I don't shoot RAW, everything is about speed., plus fast editing and uploading ASAP.