Thursday, April 10, 2025

Epiphanies over hamburgers. (UPDATE: 4:23 CST): The camera and accessories have arrived. The camera is tiny and cute. Five minutes of set up and ready to go...


Yesterday I had dinner with a good friend who is an even more frequent buyer of cool cameras than I am. We were supposed to have lunch this week, back on Monday, but a delivery delay changed our plans. Turns out he was waiting on the delivery of a brand new Hasselblad X2D camera and a very cute and very small 28mm lens. You know the drill I suppose. Few retailers will send out a $12K plus package of goods without requiring (demanding?) that you be home to sign for the delivered package. And most of us have gotten used to the idea that no matter when UPS or Fedex tell you your delivery window might be it will change faster than U.S. tariff policies over the course of the delivery day. In fact, for me, one of the most frustrating facets of modern life is the waiting for and then delayed delivery. 

Ever other delivery I get from a camera store or retailer, sent via UPS or Fedex, starts out so optimistically, almost cheery. Of course you'll get a notice telling you to expect your delivery between 9:50 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. on, well, today. It doesn't come so you check your tracking information in the email they sent. Now the time has been revised to between 1:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Which is then revised to just.... before 9 p.m. If you are a busy person you've basically just lost of a full day waiting around for someone to deliver that wonderful package that was supposed to be a solution to some problem or just a fun toy that would add some sparkle to your day. Now it has turned into a logistical nightmare. After dinner, the one you had to have at home after telling your friend, spouse or other potential dining partner that, unfortunately you have to change plans as you have to be home to accept and sign for your precious package... You eat leftovers while a rising sense of frustration climbs. Not to mention the dreaded social isolation...

Mid-evening, after clicking through Netflix and determining that you've seen every decent offering on the service, you decide to double check the delivery information with the tracking number for your package. Now, in a total deflation of happiness, you find that your expensive and much coveted package is now being rescheduled for delivery.....tomorrow. Which means you get to start the dreaded procedure all over again the next day. And to compound your frustration you are never, ever given a reason for the implied but failed promise. You are left dangling at the whim of a faceless corporation. A corporation that really doesn't give a f@ck about you getting your package on time. They'll get paid for it no matter when you get your products.

Can you tell that I'm waiting for a delivery today? 

Fortunately my friend did finally get his package on Monday but long after the promised time frame. Still, getting a Hasselblad X2D and a lens on the promised delivery day has to count for something...

We met for dinner last evening. We ordered our burgers and a shared big batch of French fries and sat down to chat about, of all things, photography, cameras, and monitor screens. What a nice divertissement from the off-key, fog horn pronouncements about the gyrating stock markets and the nasty tariffs. 

After we finished with our meal my friend disgorged the H-Blad from his WotanCraft camera bag and handed it over to me (yes, I had washed the fry and burger grease off my hands...) to inspect. I went straight for the EVF. Really nice! I visited the menus for a good while and was thrilled to actually find a menu that looks even better and even more distilled down to the essentials than my recent Leica cameras' menus. The body is gorgeous, minimal, almost stealthy and the lens he had attached to the camera was tiny. 

My friend is not at all interested in video production and was reveling in the fact that the X2D is completely video-less. None. Nothing to do with moving pictures. That really does help minimize the menu clutter. 

After an in-depth physical and mental handling inspection of the camera and lens he took it back from me (even though I had suggested that he let me test it for him on my upcoming trip) put it back in the bag and pulled out the latest iPad. The new one with the double layer OLED screen. We used the iPad to look at night time images he'd shot with the new camera. The images were great but the amazing thing was how perfect that screen was. Bright, clear, accurate and, well, just amazing. The camera is perfect for my friend but the introduction to it, in person, just cemented my preference for Leica SL cameras as high end work cameras. Will I ever buy one of the X2D H-Blads? Unknown. Maybe. Probably. Down the road. If photography survives. The camera takes amazingly good images. The H-Blad color science "hype" isn't hype; it's really, really good.

But I'm just as excited to be getting (hopefully soon!) the little Leica D-Lux 8. Seems it's the "new" even more than the product itself that generates most of the excitement. 

A few weeks back; maybe three weeks ago, I was having lunch with the same friend and our discussion turned to what he called, "stunt Leicas." In context,  he'd bought a Leica M9 for his growing camera collection and realized that it might eventually be irreplaceable if it was lost or stolen, hence the need for an alternate, widely available and more economical model that could be pressed into service for dicey location work. We both agreed that in Singapore or Tokyo you could take a diamond encrusted, gold plated Leica out with you and never worry about theft but on the other hand there are some cities in the USA in which it seems everything not nailed down is a target for larceny. Hence the need for a more replaceable option. Hence, the stunt camera.

He reached once again into the magical Wotan Craft camera bag and pulled out an almost perfect Leica M. The typ 240. Black paint finish. Brass top and bottom plates. It had seen use but was in great shape. My friend had a 3rd generation 50mm Summicron mounted on it. A perfect combination. 

Handling the camera caused me to realize that so much of my attraction to a particular type of camera has much more to do with the handling than the spec sheet drivel. Or the frame-to-frame speed. Or the noise characteristics. If a camera isn't fun to handle then what's the point?  I have several M240s and they are my go to cameras when I want to pare gear down to the absolute imaging essentials. In fact, to our dinner last evening I also brought an M240. The M-E. And I also had a 50mm lens attached. 

My friend started out his photo passion (he's an advanced hobbyist, not doing it for the $$$) he followed the usual path of Canon, Sony, etc. For years he (politely) teased me about the Leica thing. Until he actually bought one. And was transformed. The camera that did it is also a favorite of mine. It's the original SL. The world's first professional mirrorless camera. While it's futile to try to change anyone's mind via the written word or YouTube reviews it seems like one has to have tried various other cameras and then tried something like an SL if you want to change minds. Last evening we discussed the differences and we both agree that it's in the build quality that makes the cameras feel different but it's the finer differentiation of colors that make Leica files different. 

I think all camera makers generally use similar processors (not talking about sensors, just the processors that construct the files in camera during the capture phase) in terms of throughput and speed and overall processing power but each camera maker can fine tune what and how the processor does the work. We talk about a three legged stool when we talk about the exposure triangle but I think every processor works with its own compromises. Mostly the trade-offs are between capture speed and how much processing gets done to the individual file before it is written to the SD card. The faster the processing speed the quicker the camera can write files to the card but the compromise is that each file gets less or more economical processing which affects color differentiation. The slower time from capture to card writing can give the processor more time to work on each file for a more sophisticated final product. Everything is a compromise and I guess the question I would ask is: which parameter is more important to the final user? Or if most of the final users even notice the differences in file quality?

I've worked with many camera systems and I keep coming back to cameras like the SL and the SL2-S because I find the colors not "more saturated" or "sharper" but more nuanced in their color representation. And since I'm rarely in a hurry to shoot a couple thousand images in an hour I'm happy to make what I consider a reasonable compromise; choosing quality over speed. I may be as wrong as I can be about this. But you have to agree that it does make sense....

Oh, who am I kidding? You don't have to agree. You can have your own theories. That's what makes all of this so much fun. 

Just got the email that now tells me my delivery, which was originally scheduled to happen between 9:20 a.m. and 11:30 a.m., has now been (tentatively) re-scheduled for between 1:45 and 5:45 p.m. Just the right time frame to ruin my lunch plans and to make dinner plans with other people iffy. Thanks UPS.

What a precarious time for  the house manager to be out of town!!! 

Monday, April 07, 2025

Sunny Sundays are for Photographing Fun People and Swimming Glorious Workouts. Everything else is an add-on.



It was cold, windy and dribbling rain on Sunday morning. I woke up, swallowed some coffee, grabbed a clean, dry towel from the linen cabinet and headed over to the Rollingwood Pool where I was joined a small group of fearless and dedicated swimmers ready to brave the elements and get some yards swum. How many ways to mix up the four strokes in one practice and still get a lot of yards in? Coach Kristen had the formula. Mix in some easy recovery yardage between hard sets and the yardage racks up. But it was still unseasonably cold when we exited the pool an hour later. 

After an exciting breakfast of egg, potato and onion torta, perfect coffee and a slab of Parisienne Sourdough bread, thickly coated with (sugar free) peanut butter and drizzled with blueberry preserves, I headed over to South Congress Ave. with an SL2 festooned with a 45mm lens. I visited with photographer friend, David, who has a degree in economics and we exchanged bafflement over the current state of....economics. We gave up and sat in front of Jo's Coffee for a while shooting the breeze about more interesting/less emotionally challenging topics. 

I walked the big circuit around South Congress Avenue, snapping photos of whatever and having fun just being out in the clean air, bright sun and cool temperatures. It was packed with people out along the street and that was fun too. 

I ended up back at Jo's because they have the most convenient restrooms in the area and then I decided I needed a latté as well. That's when I ran into the young lady with the hat. She was just great. And happy to stand around being photographed....

Home for dinner with B.&B. 

Here's some more photos from the day...







Reflections in a blue painted table.


Mural art at the Austin Motel courtyard. 










When Good Things Happen to Bad People...


 White House advisor Peter Navarro made up his "expert source" about tariffs from whole cloth to use in a number of his fringe books about "economics." That he hasn't been struck by lightning, isn't rotting in prison for other crimes, and is making money convincing a clueless president about his nutty money destroying theories gives credence to my headline....

Fun with a 50mm lens. And some lights. And a portrait subject. And time to play around with files. And...


L.

 There's a tech company I really like to work with. They've tried to explain to me exactly what their product does but it's software and my only, and much obsoleted, knowledge about tech is bunched up on the hardware side of the equation. At any rate they came to me a couple of years ago and asked me to do portraits for them. But not conventional portraits. They wanted to photograph their people in the studio or at their location with a background, and then have building and urban landscape photographs dropped in as backgrounds. They weren't (aren't) looking for authenticity or exacting matches, they just want to position their folks in fun backgrounds as a counterpoint to the human element. 

I'm always game for something new so, of course, I signed on. We've done a dozen or so portrait assignments for them and they've all been quite fun. Their taste in photos is different from so many of the art directors who are closer to my age. Stuff doesn't have to be believable as long as it's fun.

I photographed L. on Wednesday, just before lunch.  Afterwards I met my creative director friend and collaborator, Greg, for Mexican cuisine at Las Palomas Restaurant and we talked advertising, marketing, college age parenting and vacations. It was my turn to pick up the tab and any lunch with Greg is worth whatever I pay. He's smart, interesting and well informed about current, national advertising trends. And it's good to play catch up over lunch. That, and a lot of history doing assignment work together.

When I got back to the office I downloaded the 150 different images I'd shot of L. (above, example), did a quick, general enhancement in Lightroom (Classic), exported the files as Jpegs and then uploaded them to Smugmug, sending the link along to my client. I was expecting some delay between "send" and any sort of selection or feedback but two hours later their marketing team had already picked out three images and asked me to composite them with backgrounds in three different ways. All in color. The background in black and white with L. in color, and completely in black and white. I was happy to have a fun project to work on and I have a huge folder of urban backgrounds from all over the place to choose from. The one above is from Austin but my second and third choices used background images taken in Montreal and Paris.

I started out by pulling the three images they chose into PhotoShop. I used the selection tool to select L. from the studio background onto a transparent layer and I used the refine edge tool to make sure his hair looked good. Then I started opening background images and ...  trying the combinations out. For an image like this I end up with a bunch of layers to control effects on the background and the subject separately. I'll use a classic gradient to tone down a background on one side, another layer to control contrast, etc. 

There was a Google logo on one of the buildings in the background and I wanted to remove it even though the buildings would be out of focus. I used a selection tool (lasso) and then content aware in the delete tool to make the logo vanish but to reconstruct the area beneath the logo so it would all match. 

It took most of the next morning to choose and construct all of the combinations. I paid special attention to the foreground and backgrounds of the black and white conversions. I wanted the backgrounds to be lighter and lower contrast than the foreground and I wanted the color backgrounds to have less overall saturation than the foreground person. 

When I make portraits I usually use a longer than normal lens because I like the way an 85-100mm lens draws faces. But on Wednesday I was feeling like I needed a change in perspective. Mentally; not lens perspective... So I pulled out the "lowly" Panasonic 50mm f1.8 lens. A plastic fantastic 50mm that's actually a very, very good lens even if it's priced like a basement bargain. Mostly I wanted to use it not only for the angle of view but also because I wanted to be able to move freely and have the camera focus on the subject's eyes. I was also shooting without using a tripod because I'm trying to break an old habit of having the camera locked down on a tripod for portraits. I wanted to just go handheld instead. 

At f4.0 the lens is wicked sharp. As are most good 50mm lenses I've come across in the last 40 years. L. was a great subject and had no self conscious fear of the camera or of being photographed. He was having fun. I was having fun and that's the way a photo session should go. 

In the past this client has always used the images I've delivered to them in black and white. With that history in mind I shot in raw so it would be easy to go in either direction. I did opt to use the monochrome setting in the camera (and you don't need to shoot raw+jpeg to see a black and white image as you shoot, in current Leica SL cameras) to make sure I was capturing the correct tonalities for black and white. If that was what we ended up with.

When I sent the studio portrait images over I sent one gallery as black and whites and another gallery with the same images in color. No sense making the client try to suss out how a color image will read as a black and white or vice versa.

The session and the post processing was a lot of fun. I got to use a couple of new PhotoShop tools that made working the files a bit easier and better. But the real bonus was getting more comfortable using a wider lens for portraiture. That was a blast. And not using a tripod!

It was the very next day when I headed off to photograph an attorney with no tripod and only two lenses. A 50mm AF lens and a 70mm M series lens. So much more fun when you stop worrying about what might happen and just chill out and shoot.

Who knew shooting portraits with a 50mm lens would turn out to be a thing? Concerned about bokeh? You can always make your own...

Some color images from the 2021 Road Trip.

From "Paint Brush Alley" in San Angelo, TX.

Fun times here in VSL H.Q. The CFO ordered a new computer and is looking forward to experiencing the speed of a fast, M4 processor. I couldn't resist a bargain so I ordered a slightly used Leica D-Lux 8 and a smattering of accessories and am now just lingering in the office to get the tracking number from the shipper. The weather was cool and sunny for our walk this morning and everything seems okay. But maybe that's because we've resisted checking in on the equity markets today...

I had a blast out photographing on S. Congress yesterday and am also trying to post some fun images later this afternoon. Don't tell me about the markets. It will ruin the surprise!!! 

Taking a few hours off to read a book. Kinda fun. Kinda last century. But first?

From "Paint Brush Alley" in San Angelo, TX.


From Kline's Korner gas station and "general" store on the way to Santa Fe.


Sculpture installation in Santa Fe. On Canyon Road.

From "Paint Brush Alley" in San Angelo, TX.



 






A different take on Mannequins. Scary. 










Saturday, April 05, 2025

Are Bayer Pattern Color Photo Conversions to Black and White Really Unsharp? Really?

 

Store Window in San Angelo, Texas. 

When the world seems to be going to hell in a tote bag B. and I tend to retreat into nostalgia. It's better on the psyche than watching falling markets ratchet down minute by minute and it takes our minds off the reality that straightening out last week's destruction of the U.S. (and world) economy is going to take some time. Maybe a lot of time. We're choosing to spend that time catching up on projects we meant to do anyway. 

One project that we're both focused on is going through my library of thousands of color food images to find some good stuff to redecorate our dining room and our kitchen with. Graphic close-ups of fresh produce. Photos of people shopping the markets. And still life images of stacks of interesting dish ware and utensils. To facilitate the process I converted raw files into Jpegs and made easily accessible galleries on Smugmug of markets in Austin, Vancouver, Montreal and San Antonio. We were surprised that shooting regularly over a couple of decades can add up to a prodigious number of good candidates for room decoration. For everyday usable art. 

But as I was digging into various folders and Lightroom folders I came across a neglected vacation folder. It was a trip from Austin to San Angelo to Roswell, NM, to Santa Fe and back again. It was an odd time. We weren't flying then because of Covid, and our responsibilities to aging parents, so we took a road trip instead. Going by car slowed down the process and that was fine with B. and me. We'd gotten into the modern vacation paradigm of flying off to some place trendy, staying a week and then flying back home. It's a totally different sensibility when one drives. You see the mileage. You register the wide open spaces and you connect, I think, much better with your travel. Just seeing the difference in gas station designs can be a thin. Diners in some small towns you'll venture through are like museum pieces. And it can be so interesting to see what's just around the next corner. 

When I found the folder for the 2021 vacation I decided to take a brief look and see if I still liked any of the photographs. There were no food images taken on the trip so I was taking a detour from the task at hand. It was surprising how not looking at a group of photographs for four years could allow you to see what you shot with fresh eyes. With a different perspective. Looking at vacation photos in the days and weeks after your return home prejudices the assessment. You're still busy thinking how you could have done things differently with your camera. Which lens you should have used. And there is also the urge to process selected images in a way that may not seem right when you look at the images years later. 

There are a lot of color images in the 2021 vacation folder but there are some in there that I played with at the time by converting them from color raw files to monochrome (or, black and white) images. And I liked the results I was getting from simple conversions in PhotoShop and Lightroom. 

But every so often I'll read something on the web that describes dedicated monochrome camera images as much sharper and much more detailed than files which start life as color images in cameras with Bayer Pattern filters. I don't know if my eyes are just faulty or someone else's perspective is colored by their gear investments and their need to be contrarian to the usual processes but I find myself a bit baffled. 

Now, I may not be the sharpest "lens" in the camera bag of photography but I have had an extensive, forty plus year history of printing black and white negatives from every format from Minox 16mm to 8x10 Verichome Pan, and everything in between. But the more important point, I guess, is that I've printed thousands and thousands of prints, in various sizes, over those same years. I have also spent time, as a faculty member at UT's College of Fine Arts taking students to see world famous prints at the Humanities Research Center on campus. Even though I am, of course, prejudiced in my beliefs in my ability to assess the quality of photographic images, I do believe I've spent a lot more time, hands on, than most people. And I wanted to bring that perspective to bear as I tried to understand the difference between what I was reading and what I was actually seeing. How sharpness differences manifested in the "real world." 

One point that I think is vital to understand is the role that sensor resolution plays when making comparisons. While the Bayer Filter sitting across the sensor on full color cameras soaks up the equivalent of one stop of overall illumination to the sensor compared to an unfiltered sensor the whole picture is much more complex. See this engaging article to learn more: https://photo.stackexchange.com/questions/87528/how-much-light-and-resolution-is-lost-to-color-filter-arrays

A thorough reading of several sources shows that while the Bayer filter can cut light to the sensor by 2X or more the actual efficiency of a sensor with a Bayer filter in terms of overall resolution is about 50% or one stop difference. And the visual effect, or what your eye sees, is usually much less because of ever more precise algorithms which use information from surrounding clusters of pixels to interpolate color. 

If you match up a color camera and a monochrome camera of the same resolutions the measured resolution of the color camera is, mathematically, 50% of the B&W only camera. But many photographers are using monochrome cameras with only 24 megapixels of resolution while many popular color cameras in use right now have double the megapixel resolution or more. Even if we use the 50% loss of information as a standard it would mean that a 47 megapixel color sensor would effectively equal the 24 megapixel B&W sensor but would suffer a penalty of a stop to two stops less illumination efficiency.  But importantly the resolution would be the same. While to the perception of the human eye the filtered sensor, coupled with advanced algorithms, could even exceed the perceptual maximum of the unfiltered sensor. 

When I have compared 24 megapixel B&W file apparent sharpness; encompassing detail, accutance and fine texture, with downsampled conversions from 47 megapixel color sensors there are differences in tonality from the sensitivity to different colors in a scene and the panchromatic rendering versus linear rendering the overall sharpness and resolution is, for all intents and purposes equivalent. Obviously comparing 24 versus 24 megapixel sensors gives the advantage to the monochrome sensor but with the loss from the monochrome sensor of advanced color channel control. A loss which yields a diminishing of much of the creative control in the final look of a file. 

While most things can be measured the measurements are generally presented in a vacuum while photographic equipment operates as a system. Much depends on the quality of a lens, the stability of the whole system platform, the method of post processing and even the efficiency of various cameras' de-Bayering algorithms and processing. 

Raw, unprocessed files out of almost any kind of camera from either side of the aisle, are linear tonal constructs and it's only after a characteristic curve is applied to a file that we can see a clear image that appears tonally correct to our eyes. An "S" curve of some sort is nearly always applied in the first step of post processing by whatever program is used. You generally never see an actual, linear raw file on your screen because when you open a raw file in any modern processing application a general curve or a precise curve has been applied to the file upon opening. Since the contrast of an image directly affects our perception of sharpness it is possible that the automatic application of a curve profile is in fact more important to our perception of the qualities of a monochrome image than what kind of sensor was used in the image's initial creation. 

A further step for some photographers is to use the built-in camera profiles for monochrome along with the utilization of Jpegs as a file type. In older generation digital color cameras manufacturers generally took the short cut version of just deducting the saturation of a color file in order to make a representation of black and white. A deeper study of newer generations of color cameras shows that camera makers have created B&W profiles that are color spectrum sensitive and use precise applications of color channels, in conjunction with appropriate contrast curves to more precisely and convincingly create monochrome files that are much more complex and pleasingly close to classic black and white film imaging and paper printing. These profiles take into consideration contrast levels in multiple sectors or tonal ranges of the files instead of depending on just one overarching and averaging contrast curve.

If one were to eliminate the variables that come from the lens, the skill of the photographer in providing a stable platform for the system, and in doing legitimate post processing with the best tools I submit that there would be little, if any, difference in any 47+ resolution color camera film converted to monochrome and an identical but half resolution dedicated black and white camera file. Even though the owners of those monochrome cameras would wish otherwise.

But is sharpness and detail that big of a differentiator in current photography? I think not. Those properties can be cold and analytical in a field where aesthetics is more functionally and fundamentally important than small percentage increases in already overly endowed resolution characteristics. Finally, we have to understand the limitations of viewing distance on perceived sharpness and detail. The human eye can only resolve about 5 to 15 megapixels of information when stationary (eyes not scanning). At a glance. For instance while taking in a whole photographic print. The eyes have an imputed resolution of over 500 megapixels but, importantly, only while moving and scanning. And the eye has no actual pixels and perceives color and detail in a much different way than a sensor. 

When we view a photographic print we are limited by factors such as how bright the viewing lights on the print are as well as our age, our overall health, our personal visual potential and, equally important, the viewing distance to the print and the size of the print. Also, prints have properties of granularity, halation and are often degraded by back reflection and artifacts of internal reflection. The substrate itself introduces limitations in actual resolution as well. Given the complex mix of limiting factors just about any current digital camera resolving 24 megapixels or more, black and white only or in full color, is enough to provide the correct amount of detail given standard and accepted viewing distances. Certainly you can press your nose against a print but that's hardly the common use case for viewing photographic prints. The bigger the print the lower per inch resolution needed to deliver the same viewing perception as a smaller print. 

Many people who are using monochrome only cameras and displaying the results on websites and various screen-centric presentations are making photographs of landscapes, urban constructions, etc. A good proportion of the subjects photographed are highly suitable for yet another "curative" for the interference (pun intended) of Bayer filters. That would be the use of widely available in-camera, multi-shot resolution enhancement. In those (usually tripod mounted) cameras the sensor is moved up to eight times in small increments during the capture time and the eight resulting images are blended together while throwing out anomalies occurring between "layers." An eight step multi-res process adds up to four times the resolution of a single exposure which should yield two times as much unadulterated detail as a regular file. A conversion and downsampling of these files to match the size of a single shot mono file should be more than equivalent in terms of the accuracy of the raw data. At that point the post processing application is the common denominator/inflection point of differentiation. 

As I said at the beginning, I'm not the smartest guy in the gallery but I do trust my eyes to detect differences in final files and prints. That's why I often don't take other people's anecdotal relaying of information as gospel. I prefer to see what the actual effects of mixtures of complex interrelationships of imaging parameters are in the real world. As in: How do the differently generated images look on the screen after I've post processed them? How do the differently generated images look on paper after I have printed them? 

You may see all kinds of differences in different cameras. Those differences may be down to any number of things beyond the kind of sensor being used. While color cameras can make very, very convincing and pleasing black and white images you will find that there are not any one shot, black and white only cameras that can make a color image worth a damn. 

One observational note about the desire-ability of specialty black and white cameras is this: I see more monochrome model Leica rangefinder cameras on the used camera market in a season (as a percentage of total sales) than I do the stock, color versions of the same model family. Used, tested, tried and released back into the wild. Not an exact study but a trend I've certainly seen recur over time. 

Of course, I could be wrong but as long as I am able to pull sharp, detailed, contrast-appropriate images out of Bayer Filtered camera sensors I think I'm okay with it. Everyone is looking for a magic bullet in this artistic field. The Placebo Effect is strong among photographers. How else could Leica and Hasselblad command such high prices??? 

And yeah. I fall for marketing as hard or harder than everyone else. 

I like this image because of the soft gradations of the white sheets in the upper highlight range. The black band on the hat provides a nice tonal contrast as do the details of the weave in the hat. Would this image be better with greater perception of detail or would it be trading off the initial intention of the photographer?






It seems a bit disingenuous to show an image that's 3200 pixel wide when it started life at 8800+ pixels wide and then try to make an argument that it is sharper or less sharp than it would be if made with a different camera. On the original file one can see details on individual bricks. Those are not visible on this presentation. The final use of the file is the important point. Resolution, or post production sharpness used as bragging rights has nothing to do with making images for general viewing. Just as using Kodak's ISO Technical Pan 25 black and white film wasn't and isn't the appropriate substitute for Tri-X film. Not from an artistic/aestetic point of view..... anyway.