Been shooting with my Canon Rebel T6i for some time now, and while I've had SOME nice shots, too many I'm just far too dissatisfied with and really don't know what kind of techniques to try at this point. Really, my issue is with sharpness quality in landscape shots. It may just be the hardware, but typically my landscape shots come out far too soft meanwhile any closeups of objects tend to be far better. I shoot with both RAW and JPEG, but since the majority of my shots are taken in high light, I don't typically carry around a tripod and have been using Photoscape Pro for basic photo editing. Adjusting the sharpness in Photoscape improves a bit, but there is still, what I perceive to be, too much softness. Since Photoscape also edits in RAW, I have tried that route but honestly have not seen any significant difference (if any at all) in image quality when editing in either RAW or JPEG with MY own shots, so I just stick to JPEG because it makes images easier to share (editing in RAW seems more fitting for shots in lower light or areas where certain details are blown out are too dark).
My settings are basic and even when trying as many techniques I've read about I still have not seen an improvement in quality. ISO is always kept as low as possible - 100 in good light, and 200 to 400 in shade or shadows. Indoor shots in lower light I could try anywhere between 800 to 1600, and adjust shutter speed accordingly so camera shake won't be an issue. For landscape shots I keep my f stops high, about 18 to 20, and my shutter speed is adjusted to best keep my histogram even. I keep in Manual mode, make my focus point 1/3 of the way up from the bottom in virtually every shot. I take multiple shots per scene (3 or 4) and pick the middle or best pic. I don't use flash typically because virtually all my shots are taken in the daylight. I own a basic attachable flash but don't usually use it as it never feels needed. Most photos are also taken in "sunlight" mode as it keeps a cooler tone I prefer and a good base for editing later.
Here is an example of a landscape photo and the "softness" I am referring to, using ALL the techniques I have mentioned, completely unedited. Photo was taken at f/20, ISO 400, 1/60 sec, handheld:
[IMG][/IMG]
Editing sharpness helps somewhat, but image softness is still visible and the photo still looks too unprofessional (at least for a JPEG using a cheaper photo editor). The website is not allowing me to upload the edited photo because I think it's too big.
Here is an example of a closeup shot with a low f stop, handheld again for comparison, unedited (f/5, ISO 200, 1/160 sec):
[IMG][/IMG]
As you can see, the closeup of the fire helmet is far better than the buildings in the first pic. Using the sharpness tool on my editor again, does help, and it helps significantly better in the 2nd closeup pic than it does in the first pic.
Both of these shots were taken with my standard 18-55mm stock lens.
If I can improve these images with a better lens (I also own a 75-300mm Canon lens) please point the way with the best choices. I wish to purchase Lightroom 6 soon but not sure if it will make much of a difference considering the hardware I'm using and if my photos are still going to come out the same because something is just missing in my technique. Not sure what else I can really improve with my basic landscape shooting at this point. i'm wondering if it would be better to invest in a new lens AND perhaps a new laptop or computer BEFORE I go and start with Lightroom 6. Thank you all very much again.