Ken Nadvornick
Member
Here's a few of my sharper photographs...
Lovely aesthetic precision, Rich.
(And Matt!)

Ken
Here's a few of my sharper photographs...
Well that says more about you than me.Attractive image, Rob, but none of these postings illustrate anything about sharpness. Hype the contrast and edge effect a bit and people have something which simulates sharpness for web purposes, but it's all faux unless web presentation itself is the final objective. Nor does highly magnifying part of a scan realize the objective. Printing paper might see things differently (this is APUG, after all). Even for casual purposes,
I'd trust a light box and magnifier long before I'd trust any web posting. Of course, this is sometimes the best we can do over distance, so I
understand the logistical limitations. Now Rich is a little different story, because I'll probably stumble into him some day locally.
All of the images posted thusfar look like digital image files displayed on a 92 dpi monitor to me. I'm not see this "sharpness" that everyone is talking about. With my reading glasses on, I can make out the RBG color pixels of the monitor screen. Is that what determines the sharpness of these images . . . the size of the RGB color pixels and sub-pixels?
They look like digital images because they are all digitized images and your graphics card has to deconstruct the image into several monitor pixels of rgb to reproduce the image. i.e. as previously pointed out, its a pointless exercise which proves nothing.
Get yourself a monitor with a higher pixel density and don't wipe your nose against it.
I knew it, I just knew it. In the old days I had the same complaint. Photos being printed out on dot matrix printers using the standard character set that was available. The sharpness was not present. I couldn't see much improvement on computer green screens either. So, in other words . . . nothing has changed.
it really isn't a pointless exercise.
i never suggested it was to prove anything ( you did ? ) ...
it seem to me here on apug there endless talk about "sharpness" &c and usually the people who the instructing and talking
fail to post any examples from their own archives ( for whatever reasons they have ) so in the end it seems that it is just
armchair experts dispensing ( or regurgitating at times ) advice to newbies or people with an interest but no experience.
the point of this thread is just to post an image or a few with the lens and developer data so if someone wants to see what a sharp image might look like
( if they have no experience, aren't sure &c ) they can see what might be a sharp image. sharpness means different things to different people ..
for me it means contrast and microcontrast to show details, to someone else it might mean something different ....
YMMV
thanks for posting your example !
it really isn't a pointless exercise.
i never suggested it was to prove anything ( you did ? ) ...
it seem to me here on apug there endless talk about "sharpness" &c and usually the people who the instructing and talking
fail to post any examples from their own archives ( for whatever reasons they have ) so in the end it seems that it is just
armchair experts dispensing ( or regurgitating at times ) advice to newbies or people with an interest but no experience.
the point of this thread is just to post an image or a few with the lens and developer data so if someone wants to see what a sharp image might look like
( if they have no experience, aren't sure &c ) they can see what might be a sharp image. sharpness means different things to different people ..
for me it means contrast and microcontrast to show details, to someone else it might mean something different ....
YMMV
thanks for posting your example !
seems more like the usual mountains and molehills :munch:
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