![Quote](images/misc/quote_icon.png)
Originally Posted by
xpatUSA
I could not resist a try with my new toy. The target is by Bart van der Wolf who posts on LL a lot - it is a variation of the Siemens star with sinusoidal spokes, 144 cycles, about 130mm square - shot with my DMC-GH1 from a meter or so at f=45mm, ISO 100. Big files, sorry, but downsizing invalidates the results :-(
f/22, f/16, f/11, f/8:
(image)
f/8, f/7.1, f/6.3, f/5.6:
(image)
It can be seen clearly that the extremes of aperture are soft as expected but that f/6.3 thru f/11 are quite useable with f/8 being arguably the winner but barely so.
A slant-edge test would perhaps be more precise, due to the moiré in the above images. In fact, slant-edge tests show that f/11 is in fact slightly better at 1620 lpph. f/22 was fair at 1305 lpph and f/5.6 a poor third at 1095 lpph.
It remains my firm belief that a lens "sweet spot" can not be quantified by shots of natural objects. These quantified results also showed clearly a "useable" range of apertures f/11 thru f/6.3 that would allow setting for depth of field without too much concern that sharpness could thereby be significantly reduced.