Numfar Offline Upload & Sell: Off
|
AGeoJO wrote:
Brent,
To my eyes, even the area that is in focus doesn't seem to be really sharp to me. Maybe it has to do with the low level of skin contrast. I don't know where the actual focal plane is and of course, I know what the problem of that particular shot even less. On a different note, you know that the AA filter of the 1Ds MarkIII is particularly strong and your info indicates that there was no sharpening applied. As such, the files generated by this camera would benefit greatly from sharpening. I am not saying that this is the only issue on that particular shot here but it could definitely contribute to the overall soft appearance. Just a thought.
You indicated that 80-90% of of the sequence would be just fine. I am not sure whether it is a good rate; considering that it was done in a studio under controlled conditions, then maybe not .
In my experience with the 5D (my previous studio camera) having 1 or 2 out of focus shots like this in a session would happen, but it would be rare. With the 1DsIII, I have 20-30 in a headshot session with regularity.
The shots all around this one have the eye much sharper, so it's not the effect of the AA filter that you're seeing. I do agree, however, that the 1DsIII files *really* perk up a lot with some fine line sharpening. I routinely do capture and output sharpening now on the files.
I still use the 1DsIII in studio all the time - but I hesitate at shooting lower than f/5.6 - and often turn to the 5D when doing that (which is a pain, b/c that means I need to have a different charger, different batteries on hand).
I also use the 1DIII - and mine was severely effected by the focus problem (it's body # is in the first 5000 produced). It's better now with all the firmware updates, submirror fix etc - but it's still not great.
At last winter's World Hockey Championships, I shot a few games with the 1DIII and Nikon D3 - and the Canon focused faster, but had a significantly lower 'keep' rate of 'in focus' shots.
All that said, I'm remaining a Canon shooter for now. The 5DII will help make the decision for me to continue to wait for the 1DIV, or wheteher to move into the D3x when (if) it's released.
|