Excramentative jubium extradisum.I heard a rumor that Angry Photographer has an advanced degree in bulljive. Is that true?
Truth about lenses any lens
Ok i saw this video that Ken put out and he hit the nail on the head about lenses, i always
knew this and i can't agree with more..
Want to know the truth about lenses watch this..
It's like this there is always a sweet spot to where you focus your lens, just like every lens has a Aperture Sweet Spot where it captures it's sharpest..
This is why some times when some one uses a specific lens does portraits and wonders why one picture is not quite as sharp as another,
and many times it's due to where it was very sharp you had your lens at it's sweet spot and the other picture that was not so hot, is because it was NOT at it's sweet spot..
Hi Donny,
Thank you for sharing this video. I can identify with your opinion about finding the most effective spot or setting on a lens.
Hi Donny,
Thank you for sharing this video. I can identify with your opinion about finding the most effective spot or setting on a lens.
@Lonnie1212
Wait, you agree that your lenses acheive focus better at particular focal lengths?
Because that's Donny's assessment as written.
Well Lonnie I would check the EXIF information, and see what focal length and what aperture and what ISO was used. That should give you a pretty good idea of where your lens is quite good. When I view my images in Lightroom. I have it set to display the focal length, the shutter speed, the ISO, and the aperture. In other words I want to see the exposure data and mentally correlate it with the resulting photo.
When taking star photosor city photos at night ,freedom from coma is particularly valuable in a lens. It just possible that with your 18 to 35 zoom lens you shot at an aperture where the lens is free from coma. Coma often makes a point of light look kind of like a football or an elongated saucer, like a flying saucer. If a lens is well corrected for coma it is therefore especially good for star or night photography where there are light sources.
Freedom from coma is something that was a serious design criteria in the Sigma 50 mm f / 1.4 ART lens. The same was true in Nikon's old 58 mm F/1.2 Noct~Nikkor. Both of these lenses were designed to be shot in situations where their freedom from coma would give the photographer a real advantage. A few years ago I saw a side by side city night scene comparison of the SIgma 50mm 1.4 ART and Canon and Nikon 50 mm f / 1.4 lenses... the Sigma is a huge lens by comparison to either of those normal lenses, and it is more expensive as well, but it is also designed to be free from optical aberration at its widest lens openings. Pretty much the same thing is true of the roughly $4,000 Zeiss Batis.
Freedom from coma is something that was a serious design criteria in the Sigma 50 mm f / 1.4 ART lens. The same was true in Nikon's old 58 mm F/1.2 Noct~Nikkor. Both of these lenses were designed to be shot in situations where their freedom from coma would give the photographer a real advantage. A few years ago I saw a side by side city night scene comparison of the SIgma 50mm 1.4 ART and Canon and Nikon 50 mm f / 1.4 lenses... the Sigma is a huge lens by comparison to either of those normal lenses, and it is more expensive as well, but it is also designed to be free from optical aberration at its widest lens openings. Pretty much the same thing is true of the roughly $4,000 Zeiss Batis.
Looked up the Sigma 50 mm ART lens up on eBay. Found one for $550.00.