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Roger Cicala tests the 40s fabulous
#11
In equivalenencing mood again?  Rolleyes

A 45/1.8 is a 45/1.8. It will have a hard time to stand against a 90/3.6 FF, but who cares?  Big Grin

Yes, I was talking about AF issues. And that it's a good thing not to have to take care about these curvature.
#12
It seems you do not understand what field curvature is...
#13
(03-09-2018, 11:44 AM)Brightcolours Wrote: Huh? It makes no difference whether the camera body has a mirror or not, the field curvature in the image will be exactly the same. Field curvature does not impact AF either.

He claimed (correctly) that eye detection would focus on the eye regardless of whether the eye is in the center or edge. While the curvature might impact the overall image quality (for better or worse) them eyes will be sharp.
#14
By reading through Roger's article I realized how many options are out there for MFT crowd. From cheap to expensive, light to heavy...
#15
(03-09-2018, 11:50 PM)you2 Wrote:
(03-09-2018, 11:44 AM)Brightcolours Wrote: Huh? It makes no difference whether the camera body has a mirror or not, the field curvature in the image will be exactly the same. Field curvature does not impact AF either.

He claimed (correctly) that eye detection would focus on the eye regardless of whether the eye is in the center or edge. While the curvature might impact the overall image quality (for better or worse) them eyes will be sharp.

And what does sharp eyes have to do with field curvature? With a DSLR field curvature does not impact AF. The AF uses the same curved projected image too.
Weird "discussion".
#16
(03-10-2018, 05:32 AM)Brightcolours Wrote:
(03-09-2018, 11:50 PM)you2 Wrote:
(03-09-2018, 11:44 AM)Brightcolours Wrote: Huh? It makes no difference whether the camera body has a mirror or not, the field curvature in the image will be exactly the same. Field curvature does not impact AF either.

He claimed (correctly) that eye detection would focus on the eye regardless of whether the eye is in the center or edge. While the curvature might impact the overall image quality (for better or worse) them eyes will be sharp.

And what does sharp eyes have to do with field curvature? With a DSLR field curvature does not impact AF. The AF uses the same curved projected image too.
Weird "discussion".

"Weird" only, if one believes in accuracy of indirect AF and if one strictly ignores the full coverage of AF points, contrary to the comparatively small area covered in a FF DSLR - but even APS-C DSLRs will not reach the outer areas. And by using a fully covered frame, some compositions become possible you can't dream of to focus properly with a wide open lens.

Roger is talking about portrait lenses, some of them with pretty fast apertures. I often wished for more and better focus points in the DSLR, but that wish only gets fulfilled in mirrorless land. DSLR LiveView is more for static objects. If you don't need it, the discussion must sound weird for you.
#17
With portraits one does not put eyes on the border of images....

So I guess you were trying to push the straw man notion of focus and recompose in relation to field curvature here. Okay.
#18
(03-10-2018, 09:16 AM)Brightcolours Wrote: With portraits one does not put eyes on the border of images....

There might be cases where you do:

[Image: 40723720611_ac77ec959e_o.jpg]

[Image: 16802085016_cf8e2a5af7_o.jpg]
--Florent

Flickr gallery
#19
Yeah and 85mm FF lenses are known for field curvature issues. Keep the straw man argument going. Lovin' it.
#20
The point is for portraits we don't care about field curvature as long as subject is in focus, on a SLR using central AF pint and recomposing might cause an issue, on mirrorless using the sensor itself for AF, I don't see where can it be problematic, unless you are shooting groups of people
  


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