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stingOM
Joined: 27 Sep 2007 Posts: 3168 Location: Ireland
Expire: 2012-12-27
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Posted: Wed Oct 06, 2010 5:37 pm Post subject: Discovering the power of sensor |
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stingOM wrote:
I know I am a bit late in discovering this fact, but I am truly impressed just how good the Sigma foveon sensor performs in terms of the IQ it can deliver!
Canon 5D vs SD14
http://www.ddisoftware.com/sd14-5d/
It is a pity there is no FF ver |
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kawasakiguy37
Joined: 13 Jul 2010 Posts: 132
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Posted: Wed Oct 06, 2010 6:54 pm Post subject: |
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kawasakiguy37 wrote:
Video cameras have been doing this for years.....bout time we saw a nice FF three CCD system I think for our SLRs _________________ Nikkor
75-150 series E
105 2.0 DC
28 2.0 AIS
T-mount bellows + Spiratone 75mm Flat Field macro
300 4.0 CZJ F |
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pat donnelly
Joined: 19 Jan 2010 Posts: 666 Location: Brisbane, Australia
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Posted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 12:04 pm Post subject: Rest assured |
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pat donnelly wrote:
The way and speed of development guarantees that you will have your wish?
By then, FF may mean 4/3 though!? _________________ ---------------------------------
EP-1, E-410, E-300, D100, D1,
C-Mt: 25mm 1.9, 75mm 1.4, 75mm 1.3, 75mm 1.9, Ultra wides, one inch sensor, 20+ c-mount zooms
OM 350mm f2.8, Nikkor 180 f2.8, Exa 180 f2.8,
Tamrons: 90mm f2.5, 500mm f8 x3, 135 f2.5, 200 f3.5, 24mm 2.5, 28mm 2.5 x8,
FD 500mm mirror lens |
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Scheimpflug
Joined: 06 Feb 2010 Posts: 1888 Location: New Zealand / USA
Expire: 2011-11-18
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Posted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 9:08 pm Post subject: Re: Discovering the power of sensor |
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Scheimpflug wrote:
stingOM wrote: |
It is a pity there is no FF ver |
Did you see the announcement of the SD1? It isn't FF yet, but they have enlarged the sensor a bit... moving from a 1.7x to a 1.5x crop factor. _________________ Sigma DP1, Nikon D40 (hers ), Polaroid x530, Pentax P30t, Pentax P50, (P30t/P50 K-A to Nikon F body mount conversion)
Nikon: 18-55/3.5-5.6 "G ED II DX" (F) Soligor: 28/2.8 (FL->F converted), 135/3.5 (F), 3x TC (F, modified) Kalimar: 28-85/3.5 (F)
Vivitar: 70-210/2.8-4.0 Version 3 (F), Tele 500/6.3 Preset (F), 19/3.8 (F) Minolta: 300/5.6 (SR/MC/MD pending F conversion)
Tamron: 28/2.8 (Adaptall) Panagor: 28/2.5 (FD) Aetna: 300/5.6 (F) Osawa: MC 28/2.8 (F)
Vintage Lenses: Dallmeyer: 1940s A.M. 14in 356mm f4 (ULF->M42) 1930s Adon Telephoto Taylor, Taylor & Hobson: 1880s Rapid Rectilinear 8 1/2 x 6 1/2 11.31in f/8 (LF->?)
Parts Lenses: Nikon 35-135/3.5-4.5 (F), Sigma 70-210/4.5 (F), Nikon 50/1.8 Series E (F) |
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exaklaus
Joined: 11 Aug 2009 Posts: 1633 Location: Niederrhein, Germany
Expire: 2011-12-02
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 5:56 pm Post subject: Re: Discovering the power of sensor |
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exaklaus wrote:
stingOM wrote: |
I know I am a bit late in discovering this fact, but I am truly impressed just how good the Sigma foveon sensor performs in terms of the IQ it can deliver!
Canon 5D vs SD14
http://www.ddisoftware.com/sd14-5d/
It is a pity there is no FF ver |
Yes, that is absolutly true. Started in 2003 with Foveon until this year.Wanted a FF. I love my 5DII, but there is still an edge (at good light and low ISO) where the Sigma really sings!!!
SD1 sounds promising. When releasing a FF, I will get one!
Klaus _________________ my Ebay auctions
Canon 5D II,
Fuji GW690III, Fuji G617, Fujifilm X-E1
Bessaflex TM
Tachihara 4"x5"
Summilux-R 1:1,4/50
Canon FD 85mm 1:1,2
Color-Heliar 75mm F2.5 SL
www.autoselbstfotografie.de
www.classic-cameras-and-lenses.de |
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Orio
Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Posts: 29545 Location: West Emilia
Expire: 2012-12-04
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 6:01 pm Post subject: Re: Discovering the power of sensor |
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Orio wrote:
exaklaus wrote: |
stingOM wrote: |
I know I am a bit late in discovering this fact, but I am truly impressed just how good the Sigma foveon sensor performs in terms of the IQ it can deliver!
Canon 5D vs SD14
http://www.ddisoftware.com/sd14-5d/
It is a pity there is no FF ver |
Yes, that is absolutly true. Started in 2003 with Foveon until this year.Wanted a FF. I love my 5DII, but there is still an edge (at good light and low ISO) where the Sigma really sings!!!
SD1 sounds promising. When releasing a FF, I will get one!
Klaus |
One thing I would like to read is, a serious, unbiased comparison of images taken with a Foveon reflex and a CMOS reflex, using the very same lens.
I never had the luck to find one. I read so much talk about how superior the colour performance of the Foveon is, but until I can compare two images taken in the same place, at the same moment, and with the same lens, it is impossible for me to understand. When I look at images posted with the Foveon cameras, I can not see things or colours that my 5DII can not take. But like I said, it's impossible to make a real opinion until a real, serious comparison is available. _________________ Orio, Administrator
T*
NE CEDE MALIS AUDENTIOR ITO
Ferrania film is reborn! http://www.filmferrania.it/
Support the Ornano film chemicals company and help them survive!
http://forum.mflenses.com/ornano-chemical-products-t55525.html |
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exaklaus
Joined: 11 Aug 2009 Posts: 1633 Location: Niederrhein, Germany
Expire: 2011-12-02
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 6:15 pm Post subject: |
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exaklaus wrote:
Orio, I think it is not easy to compare cameras with so different sensor sizes and resolutions! And what you see on the net can be made by nearly every half-good camera, lots of details and the overall mood of the picture gets lost. I see a picture on my computer, load it up at MF and see a different picture. A good thing to see the power of a camera is to make a really good print (my opinion). Still have a few 50x70cm prints from my SD10 on the wall, that are absolutly amazing (my opinion). OK, that can't be as it is just a 3,6mp sensor and technically explained, what happens quite often, it is crap. And the Sigma is kind of primitive, which makes it easy to handle it!
Maybe, but the results are special! (if you had a good lens, good light , low ISO)
Klaus _________________ my Ebay auctions
Canon 5D II,
Fuji GW690III, Fuji G617, Fujifilm X-E1
Bessaflex TM
Tachihara 4"x5"
Summilux-R 1:1,4/50
Canon FD 85mm 1:1,2
Color-Heliar 75mm F2.5 SL
www.autoselbstfotografie.de
www.classic-cameras-and-lenses.de |
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Anu
Joined: 14 Apr 2009 Posts: 879
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 7:12 pm Post subject: Re: Discovering the power of sensor |
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Anu wrote:
Orio wrote: |
exaklaus wrote: |
stingOM wrote: |
I know I am a bit late in discovering this fact, but I am truly impressed just how good the Sigma foveon sensor performs in terms of the IQ it can deliver!
Canon 5D vs SD14
http://www.ddisoftware.com/sd14-5d/
It is a pity there is no FF ver |
Yes, that is absolutly true. Started in 2003 with Foveon until this year.Wanted a FF. I love my 5DII, but there is still an edge (at good light and low ISO) where the Sigma really sings!!!
SD1 sounds promising. When releasing a FF, I will get one!
Klaus |
One thing I would like to read is, a serious, unbiased comparison of images taken with a Foveon reflex and a CMOS reflex, using the very same lens.
I never had the luck to find one. I read so much talk about how superior the colour performance of the Foveon is, but until I can compare two images taken in the same place, at the same moment, and with the same lens, it is impossible for me to understand. When I look at images posted with the Foveon cameras, I can not see things or colours that my 5DII can not take. But like I said, it's impossible to make a real opinion until a real, serious comparison is available. |
Foveon "colour performance" is bad compared to bayer sensored cameras. The colour superiority is a myth. It is easy to think, that if a pixel is recorded by three photosites on top of each other, that the colour is then somehow perfect or superior, but that is not the case. In reality, it is far easier to control the colour with colour filters than with silicon. The foveon-style sensor is filled with probems, like when light hits at an angle, the colour inaccuracy, high noise and so on.
But it is interesting sensor due to it being rather different.
A bit off topic - anyone interested in following the developements of the sensor technology should read the http://image-sensors-world.blogspot.com/ blog, as well as the comments. To bring this back to topic, it is interesting to notice how little interest Foveon-related news get in the commentary. Maybe a bit from Eric Fossum summarises it well: I think the Foveon story points to the barriers facing new technology that does not have compelling advantages over existing technology.
Joseph Wisniewski knows more about camera technology than all of us in this forum combined (excluding possible lurkers ), and he puts it rather clearly (yes, I did use the search function on the DPR, site I don't like all that much, but where are some actual experts enlightening silly laypeople like myself): http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1027&message=33655846 |
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Anu
Joined: 14 Apr 2009 Posts: 879
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 7:16 pm Post subject: Re: Discovering the power of sensor |
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Anu wrote:
exaklaus wrote: |
stingOM wrote: |
I know I am a bit late in discovering this fact, but I am truly impressed just how good the Sigma foveon sensor performs in terms of the IQ it can deliver!
Canon 5D vs SD14
http://www.ddisoftware.com/sd14-5d/
It is a pity there is no FF ver |
Yes, that is absolutly true. Started in 2003 with Foveon until this year.Wanted a FF. I love my 5DII, but there is still an edge (at good light and low ISO) where the Sigma really sings!!!
SD1 sounds promising. When releasing a FF, I will get one!
Klaus |
About the 20+ Mp 5DII and the 5- Mp Sigma, there is absolutely nothing where the Sigma is better than the Canon, when it comes to imaging. The simples (and silliest ) way of truping the Foveon is just by brutally combining 4 5DII pixels into 1 and turn the camera into a 5+ Mp camera where every single pixels is far superior to the Foveon pixels
Anyhow, if the Foveon FF someday materializes, I'm happy to take your then useless 5DII from your hands for a friendly token amount of money |
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Anu
Joined: 14 Apr 2009 Posts: 879
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 7:19 pm Post subject: |
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Anu wrote:
exaklaus wrote: |
Orio, I think it is not easy to compare cameras with so different sensor sizes and resolutions! And what you see on the net can be made by nearly every half-good camera, lots of details and the overall mood of the picture gets lost. I see a picture on my computer, load it up at MF and see a different picture. A good thing to see the power of a camera is to make a really good print (my opinion). Still have a few 50x70cm prints from my SD10 on the wall, that are absolutly amazing (my opinion). OK, that can't be as it is just a 3,6mp sensor and technically explained, what happens quite often, it is crap. And the Sigma is kind of primitive, which makes it easy to handle it!
Maybe, but the results are special! (if you had a good lens, good light , low ISO)
Klaus |
The results from Lomo, Holga and such are also special
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poilu
Joined: 26 Aug 2007 Posts: 10472 Location: Greece
Expire: 2019-08-29
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 7:39 pm Post subject: |
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poilu wrote:
Anu wrote: |
exaklaus wrote: |
Orio, I think it is not easy to compare cameras with so different sensor sizes and resolutions! And what you see on the net can be made by nearly every half-good camera, lots of details and the overall mood of the picture gets lost. I see a picture on my computer, load it up at MF and see a different picture. A good thing to see the power of a camera is to make a really good print (my opinion). Still have a few 50x70cm prints from my SD10 on the wall, that are absolutly amazing (my opinion). OK, that can't be as it is just a 3,6mp sensor and technically explained, what happens quite often, it is crap. And the Sigma is kind of primitive, which makes it easy to handle it!
Maybe, but the results are special! (if you had a good lens, good light , low ISO)
Klaus |
The results from Lomo, Holga and such are also special
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_________________ T* |
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stingOM
Joined: 27 Sep 2007 Posts: 3168 Location: Ireland
Expire: 2012-12-27
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 8:39 pm Post subject: |
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stingOM wrote:
Interesting and educational discussions. Thx! Keep them going |
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exaklaus
Joined: 11 Aug 2009 Posts: 1633 Location: Niederrhein, Germany
Expire: 2011-12-02
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 9:20 pm Post subject: |
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exaklaus wrote:
I knew it would work
Klaus
That was tooooo easy.... _________________ my Ebay auctions
Canon 5D II,
Fuji GW690III, Fuji G617, Fujifilm X-E1
Bessaflex TM
Tachihara 4"x5"
Summilux-R 1:1,4/50
Canon FD 85mm 1:1,2
Color-Heliar 75mm F2.5 SL
www.autoselbstfotografie.de
www.classic-cameras-and-lenses.de |
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rpo83
Joined: 01 Jun 2009 Posts: 276 Location: Melbourne, Australia
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Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 11:09 pm Post subject: Re: Discovering the power of sensor |
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rpo83 wrote:
Orio wrote: |
One thing I would like to read is, a serious, unbiased comparison of images taken with a Foveon reflex and a CMOS reflex, using the very same lens.
I never had the luck to find one. I read so much talk about how superior the colour performance of the Foveon is, but until I can compare two images taken in the same place, at the same moment, and with the same lens, it is impossible for me to understand. When I look at images posted with the Foveon cameras, I can not see things or colours that my 5DII can not take. But like I said, it's impossible to make a real opinion until a real, serious comparison is available. |
Hi Orio,
Although this doesn't cover the same lens on different bodies, this test highlights the advantage of Foveon over bayer. I don't know why this testing isn't carried out now?? All resolution tests are B&W!
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sigmadp1/page20.asp _________________ Cheers
Steve
Sigma SD10, Sigma SD14, Sigma SD14R, Sigma DP1s
Leica Lenses
Elmarit R 1:2.8/16mm, Elmarit R 1:2.8/28mm, Macro Elmarit R 1:2.8/60mm, Macro Elmar R 1:4/100 Bellows, APO Telyt R 1:3.4/180mm, Telyt R 1 :4/250mm, Vario Elmar R 1:4/35-70mm ROM, Vario Elmar R 1:4.5/75-200 Novoflex... Noflexar 1:38/200mm
M42... Carl Zeiss... Pancolar 1:1.8/80, Asahi Pentax... Super Takumar 1:3.5/35mm, S-M-C Takumar 1:1.4/50mm, Jupiter... 1:2/85mm, Pentacon... 1:2.8/135mm MC,
My Flickr Page
http://www.flickr.com/photos/rpo83/
High Res gallery on dpreview, click original
http://www.dpreview.com/Galleries/7079430607/photos |
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Anu
Joined: 14 Apr 2009 Posts: 879
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Posted: Sat Oct 23, 2010 8:59 am Post subject: Re: Discovering the power of sensor |
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Anu wrote:
rpo83 wrote: |
Orio wrote: |
One thing I would like to read is, a serious, unbiased comparison of images taken with a Foveon reflex and a CMOS reflex, using the very same lens.
I never had the luck to find one. I read so much talk about how superior the colour performance of the Foveon is, but until I can compare two images taken in the same place, at the same moment, and with the same lens, it is impossible for me to understand. When I look at images posted with the Foveon cameras, I can not see things or colours that my 5DII can not take. But like I said, it's impossible to make a real opinion until a real, serious comparison is available. |
Hi Orio,
Although this doesn't cover the same lens on different bodies, this test highlights the advantage of Foveon over bayer. I don't know why this testing isn't carried out now?? All resolution tests are B&W!
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sigmadp1/page20.asp |
It is easy to think that Foveon has some significant resolution advantage over Bayer if the pixel count is the same. However, this is not really true. Bayer sensors essentially subsample chrominance information, not so much luminance information - for example just defining the green channel as luminance is vast over simplification. In a sense one could think of Bayer-filtering as image data compression. In principle Foveon doesn't do this compression, but records all chrominance data, but in practise the data quality is very bad, making any possible advantage very questionable indeed.
When it comes to camera/sensor reviews, one should not ever look at DPR - they are clueless. Phil Askey (or whatever the name is) is stricktly an amateur when it comes to reviewing cameras. Too bad the folks he has hired don't seem to be much better suited for the job either.
The DPR forums however to have some extremely bright and well taught folks teaching the dum people like me ( ) - ejmartin, John Sheehy, Joseph S Wisniewski, falconeyes (I which he'd chosen his name to be falkoneyes though, due to his name) etc. All of them understand camera sensors better than I do, and also tend to have different backgrounds, thus giving a different perspective on the issues - ejmartin for example is a professor of physics, specializing in string theory I think. I hightly recomment readin whatever these folks write (and checking out ejmartin's and Falk Lumo's websites as well - very informative).
Regarding that dpr-link - I find it to be hillarious that they mention ambien temperature of the test environment, but fail to mention if they use raw- or jpg-files off the camera, and if former, which conversion software. As camera's can't use much power for raw->jpg-conversion, the results out of camera are always a joke (with today's technology) compared to the results out of good raw-conversion software - includng resolution. But at least we know the ambient temperature
(and btw, in real life it is hard to find the colour combinations they use - ok, the swedish flag... .) |
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kansalliskala
Joined: 19 Jul 2007 Posts: 5043 Location: Southern Finland countryside
Expire: 2016-12-30
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Posted: Sat Oct 23, 2010 9:03 am Post subject: |
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kansalliskala wrote:
kawasakiguy37 wrote: |
Video cameras have been doing this for years.....bout time we saw a nice FF three CCD system I think for our SLRs |
And film cameras for decades.
http://www.earlyphotography.co.uk/site/entry_C480.html#C480 _________________ MF: Kodak DCS SLR/c; Samsung NX10; OM-10; Canon T50
Zuiko 28/3.5, Distagon 35/2.8; Yashica ML 50/2;
Zuiko 50/1.4; S-M-C 120/2.8; Zuiko 135/3.5; 200/5;
Tamron AD1 135/2.8, Soligor 180/3.5; Tamron AD1 300/5.6
Tamron zooms: 01A, Z-210
Yashicaflex C; Київ 4 + Юпитер 8, 11; Polaroid 100; Olympus XA; Yashica T3
Museum stuff: Certo-Phot; Tele-Edixon 135; Polaris 90-190; Asahi Bellows; Ixus IIs
Projects: Agfa Isolette III (no shutter), Canon AE-1D (no sensor),
Nikon D80 (dead), The "Peace Camera"
AF: Canon, Tokina, Sigma Video: JVC GZ-MG275E |
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