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p.2 #19 · Is the 35mm 1.8 really that bad at mid distance Bokeh? | |
How photographic enthusiasts 'see' images (what might be called image analysis) varies widely. Not a knock on those who don’t see well, but we can't all run like Usain Bolt either. The more refined your seeing, the more you notice things in images. Some see skin tones well, others see greenery well, etc.
If you cannot see something, it does not follow that others also cannot. In fact, Sony users have a great advantage here. Settled lens ranges (like Canon) saw owners use the same lenses for decades, seeing the world only through their lenses. Sony started out with people from all backgrounds: A mount, M mount, Canon/Nikon/Fuji and medium format. It was a crash course in broadly defined lens appreciation, still unfolding today. All powered by the web and better monitors etc.
Once you see well (a learned skill), you’re not out of the woods yet, because you then need to escape the audio analogy introduced above. Your seeing must be 'real world' in its application, and balance its importance with other aspects, like DOF, degree of separation, subject distance, background type, context rendering in bokeh, focal plane performance and more - it's complex.
And this is why reviewers should focus more attention on comparisons of OOF/bokeh - you can see this happen in the 'best practice' work of people like Fred and Dustin Abbott, to name just two. (Most just focus on specs, or handling, cost, opinion etc.)
We've seen the reputations of too many lenses damaged due to isolated setup 'tests' showing poor bokeh - the Batis 85mm is a good example. Each new lens is now subject to great scrutiny regarding its bokeh, but tests must be realistic and comparative with competing lenses.
The design community are moving fast right now, working to improve how the new lenses perform in their bokeh production, along with all else people want. After all, they need to pry you from the older lenses to buy their new creations, and stay in business - especially now the market is not growing.
It's not GAS to want a better tool, if you take it at all seriously, devoting time outlays and money for travel, business etc. The trick is to know when the right ones *for you/your work* are at hand - old or new, well-known or exotic, affordable or costly. You can guarantee it won't be 'the one' for many others.
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