[meteorite-list] Meteorite Photography (Must read!)

Dark Matter freequarks at gmail.com
Wed Jan 27 15:35:31 EST 2010


Agreed. Perception is often reality.

However, half the fun of this List is when the content spins from the
pedestrian to the academic.

Best,

Martin



On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 1:02 PM, Meteorites USA <eric at meteoritesusa.com> wrote:
> Without seeming to endlessly argue with the data presented. I would like to
> point out the the sharpness examples in the link you provided are taken from
> a VERY small percentage of the overall image. In relation to the entire
> photo taken as a whole the sharpness of the image is comparable at any given
> area over an "average".
>
> Macro meteorite photography works the same way, and I would bet that 99% of
> people who view any photo don't look at such a small section of the entire
> photo. This is fine when shopping for a lens, but for most photos, frankly
> it does not matter much. Especially when talking about web galleries of
> images at 72 DPI. Now when talking about print resolution and sharpness
> that's a whole other topic. ;)
>
> Regards,
> Eric
>
>
>
> On 1/27/2010 11:49 AM, Dark Matter wrote:
>>
>> Sorry, but it won't. The measures are small, but the optical physics are
>> real.
>>
>> http://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/50-comparison/f-stops.htm
>>
>> Best,
>>
>> Martin
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Eric wrote:
>>
>>
>>>
>>> An f/2.8 lens focused
>>> properly with the right settings will be just as sharp in the given DOF
>>> of a
>>> comparable photo/subject photographed at a slower/smaller f/22 aperture.
>>>
>>
>>
>



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