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Thank you for putting this together. Photographic proof that just stopping down isn't sufficient if your image are intended for anything but shrinking down for the web.Now, what you can do is to retake the shots at Iso100 to reduce as much noise as possible (although your Canon does a good job here).
One other thing to think about, the 5D has a 20 Mega-Pixel sensor with full frame CCD, so the photosites are probably slightly bigger than other digital cameras with APS sized CCDs. (30 percent more pixels but 60 percent bigger sensor compared to my previous Canon D60.) I suspect that results with other digital cameras may be more susceptible to diffraction effects as small apertures due to the smaller photosites on the CCD. So you should probably do a test with your own camera to see the delta.
How long will it be before they show us how to add DCC to a tree?
not sure what the goal of all this is... this seems to be basic photography theory that i learned in college.for me, Bernie's first stop foreground and then the 2nd shot background put together would be the best "realistic" shot given the period he is modeling and the types of cameras used.
I've heard it said that pinhole "lenses" are the ideal for model photography, since they have infinite depth of field. (Although I imagine that for pinhole photography to work with a digital camera, you'd need an astronomical-grade CCD for the long exposures required.)So where's the breakpoint between diffraction-troubled small apertures and "perfect" pinholes? I.e. at what point does the aperture go from being "too small for good pictures" to "too large for good pictures"?(...I know, a silly question, coming as it does from a guy with a 3-megapixel point-and-shoot and no manual controls whatsoever...)