pierods
Member
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2007
- Messages
- 393
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- 35mm
View attachment 426107
Here's a quick test I just did.
Top: Tamron 17-35 Di LD etc. etc.
Middle: Canon EF 35/2 IS
Bottom: Canon EF-s 15-85 IS etc.
Both zooms were set at the 35mm mark as indicated on the lens housing. Exposure was identical across all three: 1/25 f/8 ISO 100, camera (EOS 7D) mounted on a tripod. Lighting is open shade on a sunny day. White balance manually set to 'shade' on camera and kept unaltered in post processing. Post processing involved making no changes whatever to any of the files as loaded into RawTherapee, only exported to JPG and then assembled in GIMP in a single file as shown above.
As you can see, there is a color signature, but it's very subtle indeed and none of it involves anything like one lens producing very strongly saturated colors that are difficult to manage etc.
Honestly, you're breaking your head over the wrong factor.
There's one exception, which is strongly tinted lenses due to the use of thorium glass, which turns strongly yellow over time. This will produce a strong color cast. None of the lenses discussed so far in this thread fall in this category.
PS the Tamron lens in the top frame is the most strongly biased lens I have used on the EOS system. I specifically included it in this test for this reason. As you can see, it's still pretty close to the Canon lenses in color rendition. You'll also note that some of the (subtle) differences between the frames is not so much color rendition, but contrast, with the affordable EF-s zoom lens taking the cake with noticeably better contrast than the other two lenses.
Very cool, thanks
