I am considering the Hasselblad X2D for crop factor and gear reduction. 100 mpx quality can make it feasible. I see Lieca is moving to a fixed lens with one or more of their models now, and marketing the idea of the crop factor vs an interchangeable lens is now something well beyond the old digital zoom of the past in fixed lens camera's.
I guessing as technology advances in camera sensors, interchangeable lenses will eventually become museum pieces. I realize sports and action is a whole different ball game but...
It is interesting non the less and wonder if anyone can comment on this in as an option in their professional work...
Non the lens?
My landscape work routinely spans a wide range of focal lengths. Some cropping is fine, but not to that extreme.
Interesting concept one lens and just using a high pixel count to do any crop required. I'm not so sure. I am thinking a wide angle lens for landscapes and then what?
This was my question back in Oct 2012
With technology racing ahead at such a pace and camera chips getting ever higher definitions, I'd like your views on how you see things going over the next few years.
Do you think we will get to a stage when we no longer need a variety of lenses, will we simply through chip size, be able to use one fairly wide main lens and then crop the image to suit?
Thanks for your thoughts - Phil
imagextrordinair wrote:
I am considering the Hasselblad X2D for crop factor and gear reduction. 100 mpx quality can make it feasible. I see Lieca is moving to a fixed lens with one or more of their models now, and marketing the idea of the crop factor vs an interchangeable lens is now something well beyond the old digital zoom of the past in fixed lens camera's.
I guessing as technology advances in camera sensors, interchangeable lenses will eventually become museum pieces. I realize sports and action is a whole different ball game but...
It is interesting non the less and wonder if anyone can comment on this in as an option in their professional work...
I am considering the Hasselblad X2D for crop facto... (
show quote)
Why not flexible element lenses that change fecal length?
Only one lens then, no cropping and loss of quality.
Architect1776 wrote:
Why not flexible element lenses that change fecal length?
Only one lens then, no cropping and loss of quality.
Not interested in lenses having anything to do with fecal anything!!
Cropping is a form of digital zoom. At the present moment in time (and with good optics), optical zooming produces better results than digital zooming. I don't see that changing any time soon. And digital zooming has significant limitations.
Even if your starting point is 100 MP, if you divide both the horizontal and the vertical pixel count by 2 (i.e. taking half the length and half the height), you immediately reduce the resolution to 25 MP. Do that again and you end up with 6.25 MP. Doing that amount of zooming optically would have a negligible effect on image quality and wouldn't result in a loss of resolution.
I recall listening to an ophthalmologist giving interesting facts about the human eye. One factoid I kept was the eye has the equivalent of 48 megapixels.
So I guess taking the first digital crop down to 50 will still loose nothing to our naked eyes viewing at any distance.
R.G. wrote:
Cropping is a form of digital zoom. At the present moment in time (and with good optics), optical zooming produces better results than digital zooming. I don't see that changing any time soon. And digital zooming has significant limitations.
Even if your starting point is 100 MP, if you divide both the horizontal and the vertical pixel count by 2 (i.e. taking half the length and half the height), you immediately reduce the resolution to 25 MP. Do that again and you end up with 6.25 MP. Doing that amount of zooming optically would have a negligible effect on image quality and wouldn't result in a loss of resolution.
Cropping is a form of digital zoom. At the presen... (
show quote)
We could also add that when you zoom in digitally you're zooming in on any noise and any lack of sharpness in the image, as well as the fact that a loss of resolution at that level will mean a significant loss of detail.
You would be better off with a full frame camera with a telephoto zoom lens--in both image quality and cost.
jackpinoh wrote:
You would be better off with a full frame camera with a telephoto zoom lens--in both image quality and cost.
That is the way I see it too
Can guess anything, but won't happen, will always have interchangeable lenses; they provide many more variables than just cropping in.
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