QuietOC wrote:
Gordon Laing covers the viewfinder extensively in his review.
I accidently posted this in the other thread. He shows the resolution differences pretty well.
yes it is quite evident yet actually for shooting birds I don't notice it as much, I am so focused on the action and getting the shot that this is the last thing I would notice. When I notice it more is when I shoot portrait which is a lot slower and more relaxed shooting... The moire and jagged artifacts are suddenly visible and distracting on lady's long hair at portrait range, especially blond or light color/shiny hair. looks like 1980's crunchy TV's. the worst part is that it shows you how nice and smooth the image out to be as soon as you are not focusing! kind of like showing a kid the candy then taking it away from them
QuietOC wrote:
Gordon Laing covers the viewfinder extensively in his review.
I accidently posted this in the other thread. He shows the resolution differences pretty well.
yes it is quite evident yet actually for shooting birds I don't notice it as much, I am so focused on the action and getting the shot that this is the last thing I would notice. When I notice it more is when I shoot portrait which is a lot slower and more relaxed shooting... The moire and jagged artifacts are suddenly visible and distracting on lady's long hair at portrait range, especially blond or bright colors. looks like 1980's crunchy TV's. the worst part is that it shows you how nice and smooth the image out to be as soon as you are not focusing! kind of like showing a kid the candy then taking it away from them
QuietOC wrote:
Gordon Laing covers the viewfinder extensively in his review.
I accidently posted this in the other thread. He shows the resolution differences pretty well.
yes it is quite evident yet actually for shooting birds I don't notice it as much, I am so focused on the action and getting the shot that this is the last thing I would notice. When I notice it more is when I shoot portrait which is a lot slower and relaxed. The moire and jagged artifacts are suddenly visible and distracting on lady's long hair at portrait range, especially blond or bright colors. looks like 1980's crunchy TV's. the worst part is that it shows you how nice and smooth the image out to be as soon as you are not focusing! kind of like showing a kid the candy then taking it away from them
Apr 05, 2021 at 11:33 PM
Previous versions of speedmaster20d's message #15556248 « A1 EVF resolution -- theoretical vs actual »