
Originally Posted by
Colin Southern
Hi Larry,
It sounds correct in theory, but in practice it's not that cut and dried. It's going to depend on the resolution of the final image and other factors. A modern typical camera may spit out something along the lines of 5000 x 3500 pixels per image and yet a typical image displayed on a monitor is probably only in the region of 1000 x 650 pixels ("ballpark" figures) - so, roughly, only one in every 5 pixels along any dimension (or 1 in every 25 square pixels) contributes to the final image - and when that's taken into account, any inherent lens softness has long been down-sampled out.
With a professional-quality lens we typically need capture sharpening of around 0.3px @ 300%; with lower-quality lenses sometimes that rises to 0.4px (occasionally 0.5px) @ 300%, and usually that's pretty much the extent of it. It doesn't have any effect on content/creative sharpening nor output sharpening.
To be honest, over the years I've seen many many many folks obsessed with lens sharpness - getting the best money can buy - and then presenting unsharpened images. In reality they're "majoring in minor things" (and "minoring in major things" if there's such a term). For sure, image degradation is ultimately cumulative, but if you take that a step further, you'll find that inherent sharpness doesn't contribute a lot to the average internet-sized image.
I should point out that I'm ONLY taking about inherent lens softness; NOT focusing / camera movement / subject movement / contrast issues etc - any of those can quickly escalate an image past the point where an "invisible repair" is possible (at which point sharpening becomes a compromise).
As much as I don't particularly like Sigma gear (and I'd never buy it), I none-the-less suspect that if I shot a landscape with that lens I really doubt anyone could tell the difference at normal internet sizes.
In Ed's case I'd suggest that good technique, good tripod & gear, and good post-processing will have a far far far greater impact on the final image.