Carlh
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- Name
- Carl
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One of my repeated C&Cs against my various pics was for poor focussing, which confused me as I thought I had pretty much managed to use the manual focussing ok. I even thought perhaps my eyesight was off and I needed an eye test 
In an effort to get my pictures sharper () Id heard the catch-word "sweet-spot" on TP.
Googling sweet spots, I found a few web pages where people ran real-world comparisons of various F-stops on a particular lens, to find the "sweet spot".
Have a quick read of this, if you dont mind:
http://improvephotography.com/2449/what-is-the-sharpest-aperture-on-a-lens/
To my amazement, I could not believe that the sweet spot on a 50mm f1.8 was actually f7.1
I tried it, at 1.8, then 4, then 7.1 then 8 and 11
The only problem was the wind has been blowing between shots so I couldnt get a set of comparable images myself. The article above basically shows the end result, and I think anyone who is interested in getting the sharpest quality out of their lens, should also run some tests of your own and maybe add them to this thread?
At 7.1, the sharpness of a subject was, well, it blew me away.
On the Tamron 70-300mm, the sweet-spot seems to be F8 for me.
If everyone ran a test, as described in the article, maybe not a newspaper, but a stationary object with considerable detail, such as a coin or brickwork, preffably on a tripod so you can clearly compare them yourself, make a note of the F-Stop of the clearest, sharpest image from your test and post the lens and F-stop info in this thread, we could build a little table of sweet-spots on everyone's type of lens.
I also recommend manual focussing for maximum sharpness, unless of course you dont trust your eyes
Heres the table so far:
Canon 50mm F1/8 - F7.1
Canon 10-22 - F8.
Tamron 70-300mm - F8
Sigma 12-24mm f4.5-5.6 - f8
Nikkor 18-200mm f3.5-5.6 - 18-70mm f5.6-f8
Nikkor 35mm f1.8 - f4
Nikkor 18-55mm f3.5-5.6 - f8
Nikon 35mm f1.4 and 85mm f1.4 the sweet spot is 1.4
Now, you may have one of the above lenses and get a different "sweet spot" - thats fine, what I would suggest is that if a majority of people have the same sweet spot for a lens and someone else with the same lens has a different sweet spot, we'll go with the majority? Sound fair?
Post away!
In an effort to get my pictures sharper () Id heard the catch-word "sweet-spot" on TP.
Googling sweet spots, I found a few web pages where people ran real-world comparisons of various F-stops on a particular lens, to find the "sweet spot".
Have a quick read of this, if you dont mind:
http://improvephotography.com/2449/what-is-the-sharpest-aperture-on-a-lens/
To my amazement, I could not believe that the sweet spot on a 50mm f1.8 was actually f7.1
I tried it, at 1.8, then 4, then 7.1 then 8 and 11
The only problem was the wind has been blowing between shots so I couldnt get a set of comparable images myself. The article above basically shows the end result, and I think anyone who is interested in getting the sharpest quality out of their lens, should also run some tests of your own and maybe add them to this thread?
At 7.1, the sharpness of a subject was, well, it blew me away.
On the Tamron 70-300mm, the sweet-spot seems to be F8 for me.
If everyone ran a test, as described in the article, maybe not a newspaper, but a stationary object with considerable detail, such as a coin or brickwork, preffably on a tripod so you can clearly compare them yourself, make a note of the F-Stop of the clearest, sharpest image from your test and post the lens and F-stop info in this thread, we could build a little table of sweet-spots on everyone's type of lens.
I also recommend manual focussing for maximum sharpness, unless of course you dont trust your eyes
Heres the table so far:
Canon 50mm F1/8 - F7.1
Canon 10-22 - F8.
Tamron 70-300mm - F8
Sigma 12-24mm f4.5-5.6 - f8
Nikkor 18-200mm f3.5-5.6 - 18-70mm f5.6-f8
Nikkor 35mm f1.8 - f4
Nikkor 18-55mm f3.5-5.6 - f8
Nikon 35mm f1.4 and 85mm f1.4 the sweet spot is 1.4
Now, you may have one of the above lenses and get a different "sweet spot" - thats fine, what I would suggest is that if a majority of people have the same sweet spot for a lens and someone else with the same lens has a different sweet spot, we'll go with the majority? Sound fair?
Post away!
Last edited:
that'll be me then !