It might - it might not.I'm confused re resolution, can somebody explain to me why a 12mp FX will give a better image when printed at 40" than a 24mp dx will? If indeed it will?
You're probably wrong, I appreciate that Sony sensors are progressing faster (I know more about Canon) but a 7dII can't hold a candle to a 5dII (similar age differences), but the 5dII does have a higher pixel count too.Thanks Phil, that all makes sense. To be a bit more specific, my contention is that a 2015 24mp D7200 will give equal if not better quality 40" prints than a 2008 released 12mp D700.
I'm not set in stone on my opinion and am prepared to be proved wrong but I can't see how a 7 year old lower res design would better a brand new higher res design?
I think I'm about to muddy the waters...
The thread title is "Resolution" but the query seems to be aimed at print quality. As there is more to print quality than simply resolution, what's the exact question?
I'm confused re resolution, can somebody explain to me why a 12mp FX will give a better image when printed at 40" than a 24mp dx will? If indeed it will?
This is an awkward one, but I'd say the D7200 will yield a file more able to print 40" across than a D700, simply because the D700 is limited by it's lower resolution. However... the D700 can yield prints bigger than 20" easily, despite being half the resolution.
Take a full frame camera with slightly higher resolution however, such as the D3 at 16MP, and the gap closes more than you would imagine. Sensor size is a factor here. Bigger sensors yield higher quality images simply because the lens doesn't have to work so hard. If both sensors were 16MP, the full frame one would be demonstrably better.
Explained simply, this is how it works.
Assuming you use the same lens on a APS-C crop sensor camera like a Nikon D7000 and a full frame camera like the D800, it will still resolve detail down to a minimum of 0.03mm regardless of which camera it is on as it's a fixed property of the lens.
- All lenses have a limit to the size of object or detail that they can resolve. This is known as the circle of confusion. For most digital SLR lenses let's assume for the same of this argument that it's around 0.03mm.
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- However, 0.03mm is smaller in proportion to the area of a full frame sensor than it is a crop sensor.
- 0.03mm is 0.12% of the total image width of a APS-C sensor (23.5mm x 16mm)
- 0.03mm is 0.08% of the total image width of a full frame sensor (36mm x 24mm)
In other words, the blurriness caused by lens defects is 33% less (or smaller) on a full frame camera compared to a crop sensor camera, regardless of it's resolution.
Again assuming we could use exactly the same lens on a 5 x 4 inch camera (I know you can't befoe anyone points this out), the percentage of image width taken up by the circle of confusion would be 0.02%
This is a 84% decrease in circle of confusion size compared to the whole image area compared to a APS-C crop sensor.
Apparent sharpness can therefore be said to be a product of sensor size.
How visible the aliasing (pixels) will be in print can therefore be said to be a product of the image resolution.
A combination of large sensor and high resolution is best, but a 16MP image on a small sensor camera will be visibly less sharp than a 16MP image from a larger sensor camera despite the aliasing being identical.
Identical sized prints from files for comparison
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Sharpness at single pixel level.
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16MP D800 images are not taken in DX crop mode, but are resized FX images. All I've done is made the pixels bigger. A 16MP FX sensor would look pretty much the same as the resized D800 image.
The resolution is identical, yet sharpness is greater from the FX image. Fact.
This is why the push for greater and greater resolution from sensors is pointless now. With the D800 we've hit a limit set by the lenses (for 35mm it's actually around 24MP)... not the sensor. If the D4X has greater than 36MP when it arrives (if it arrives) it will be utterly stupid and Nikon just pandering to people like you who feel greater pixels mean better images. If you want more sharpness now, you either optimise lens design more (as MFT has done), or move up to medium format digital. There's no more to be done. More pixels have b****r all to do with it.
However, because the D700 is so much lower in resolution than the D7200, then aliasing comes into play, and the much more visible pixel structure of the lower resolution D700 becomes a factor.
I'd say, despite the D700 being full frame, the lower 12MP resolution would make pixel aliasing very visible at 40", whereas the D7200 would hole up well. At smaller print sizes the D700 would win, but at 40" the visible pixelation would be an issue at close viewing distances. I think the 12MP of the D700 pushes this concept of sensor size a little too far.
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This is why the push for greater and greater resolution from sensors is pointless now. With the D800 we've hit a limit set by the lenses (for 35mm it's actually around 24MP)... not the sensor. If the D4X has greater than 36MP when it arrives (if it arrives) it will be utterly stupid and Nikon just pandering to people like you who feel greater pixels mean better images. If you want more sharpness now, you either optimise lens design more (as MFT has done), or move up to medium format digital. There's no more to be done. More pixels have b****r all to do with it.
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At one end, there are the very modest demands of on-screen and on-line viewing
Excellent post David
But you keep saying that modern cameras are now lens limited and it's simply not true. You can't specifiy any kind of lens limit with resolution/pixels alone,
When I see softness caused by lens limitations before I see aliasing, then it's lens limited. The end. I apply the same logic to film scanning. If I can see aliasing before I can clearly see grain, then I need to scan at a higher res. If I see grain clearly before I see aliasing, then I'm OK.
As usual.. a purely academic study of lens resolution figures measured on a bench is one thing, but out out in the field, just eyeballing it is usually enough.
I don't like the Procrustean term "lens limited". My worst lens in general use is an 18-250mm. On my previous 14MP APS-C camera it was clearly a touch softer even at its f8 sharpest than my better lenses (which are sharper at larger apertures). I've never seen aliasing on any of my lenses, unless you mean the staircasing of diagonal lines, which I can see on all my lenses, just softer on the worst. Maybe my Sony cameras have good AA filters. Maybe I need to look more carefully at photographs of fabric and distant railings.
Going by the wisdom of the web I expected to find as I upgraded to 24MP that this 18-250mm lens would be a casualty, unable to do any better with 24MP then 14MP. The sensor would have "out-resolved" the lens, if indeed it wasn't already "out-resolved" at 14MP. What I found to my surprise that on careful scrutiny of carefully selected areas of some images there was a little extra real detail visible on 24MP compared to 14MP, just less and harder to find than with better lenses.
That's why I don't like the term "lens-limited". The detail resolution capabilities of a lens and sensor combination multiply together rather like failure probabilities do. There's no hard limits. There's graded fall offs. Tests of maximum detail resolution are just different ways of placing a stake in the slope to establish a normalised nominal boundary point for lens test comparison purposes. Different tests will find different boundaries.
Generally speaking if I'm shooting jpegs with the 18-250mm and making big prints directly from the the ex-cameras jpegs there's no point in shooting jpegs larger than the half-size 12MP jpeg option of my 24MP camera. Nobody but me would be able to find the few very slight diffetrednces. But I don't print unprocessed jpegs. I always tweak them a bit, and often correct mild misalignments of verticals. Working at 24MP gives better results when processing images, even with such an "out-resolved" lens.
Yes. I don't like the term 'lens limited' either - because it's simply untrue and unhelpful. Sharpness is a coin of two halves, both lens and sensor, and if you put a higher resolution sensor behind any lens, you will see detail improvements.
David is also implying that the lens tests I do for magazines and websites are 'academic... bench tests'. Well, they're not. Some studio tests for sure but I don't have an optical bench and they're as real world as I can make them.
Not a necessary implication. As MP increase the detail resolution from a given lens increases, but by less and less as the MP increase. It also depends on what the resolution test is. Black stripes on white paper will be less sensitive than black twigs against a grey sky. It also depends on what image processing is allowed. Detail which has just become imperceptible on an ex-camera JPEG as MP are increased can be brought back to visibility by increasing contrast and sharpening. When that in turns fails, sophisticated noise reduction software may be able to make it visible again. Finally of course there will come an MP increment where no amount of careful selection of test and detail recovery post processing will recover any extra detail. That is the point at which for all kinds of image and processing the detail has become unarguably lost due to imperfections of the lens: the ulimate limit of the lens.I have to disagree with this. It implies there's not a finite amount of resolution from any given lens, and you can just keep on upping the resolution of the sensor, and keep making gains, when it's patently obvious that's not the case. You will quickly reach a limit where the lens has nothing more to give.. hence the limitation is the lens, not the sensor: Lens Limited.
Not a necessary implication. As MP increase the detail resolution from a given lens increases, but by less and less as the MP increase.
I have to disagree with this. It implies there's not a finite amount of resolution from any given lens, and you can just keep on upping the resolution of the sensor, and keep making gains, when it's patently obvious that's not the case. You will quickly reach a limit where the lens has nothing more to give.. hence the limitation is the lens, not the sensor: Lens Limited.
Can we see some of the lens tests you've conducted for them that show lenses out resolving high resolution sensors then?
I'm not saying there is no limit, only that if you want to specify a maximum resolution figure
Would some kind person resize the first 5D2 image for me, so that both are the same size for comparison? Try as I might, I can't get Photobucket to do it!
Thanks![]()

Can't download it.
View attachment 49493
Besides... Many lenses can out resolve a 24MP sensor, and the 35mm ART lens is one of them, as I suspect you know already. However... they're few and far between. Try it with a Canon L series 35mm.. Also... a better test still would be the 5D S image against a D810 image.
DP Review have raws for comparison. The 5DS R image was taken with a Canon 85mm 1.4L lens, and the D810 image with a Nikkor 85mm 1.4G. I've resized the Canon image to 7360 across. (If you do this yourselves, do NOT use any sharpening as part of PS's resizing... use BILINEAR or it's an unfair comparison.
D810
5D SR (resized to 7360 across)
However.... I'm wondering what the point of resizing the image is, as both use the same size sensor, so they'll both appear the same when resized... which they do. In all honesty... apart from the Canon file being bigger, there was nothing to tell them apart anyway.
But on the other hand, since you've just conceded that "many lenses can out resolve a 24MP sensor" that's case closed AFAICS.
One of the potential advantages of using a sensor of greater resolution than the lens/scene is greater color accuracy (offsetting the bayer array). In the posted images I see a few examples of that. In the fine text, particularly the white on black, the 5DR has less false color. The same is true in the line drawing of the man's portrait. Interestingly, they both show significant false color in the line drawing of the women, but differently.there was nothing to tell them apart anyway.
Interestingly, the 5DR has an AA filter, but the second layer "recombines" the image (I doubt the manipulation is without *any* effect).
Who'd have predicted it.Do you think that the OP has lost the will to live yet?
What that someone would ask a moderately technical question and eventually a couple of geeks would take over the thread to the point that the OP gives up? Not me. No, never.Who'd have predicted it.![]()
What that someone would ask a moderately technical question and eventually a couple of geeks would take over the thread to the point that the OP gives up? Not me. No, never.
@David and Richard: I'm only gently teasing.![]()
I forgot about that.That's what the D800E does.
Honestly, I think it was an oversimplified question to a very technical question. And pretty much unanswerable as asked.What that someone would ask a moderately technical question and eventually a couple of geeks would take over the thread to the point that the OP gives up? Not me. No, never.
@David and Richard: I'm only gently teasing.![]()
I for one am reading the thread and find it interesting![]()