Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/01/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I notice that technical quality of a picture comes pretty far down on all the lists of image criteria discussed so far. If the experts at Kodak are to believed, in this paperless society fewer than 10% of all images are ever printed up. The bulk are viewed on TV or computer screens, camera LCDs, and iPods or iPads. Assuming proper focus and exposure, the limit to technical image quality, at least measured in terms of resolution, is set by the viewing device. In the case of an HD TV, a 35 mm full frame image need only have 45 lines/mm to appear perfectly sharp. Even if the image is viewed on the top grade 27" Mac monitor it need only have 60 l/mm to appear sharp. These image resolution standards are only slightly greater than those that the old Modern Photography magazine rated as minimally acceptable. All the cameras I own, no matter how cheap or how old can meet the resolution standard required by modern image viewing systems. Every Leica lens ever made, except possibly the old Thambar portrait lens, will exceed the minimum resolution criteria. By actual test my widely disparaged 75 year old Elmar 35 mm f3.5, Leica's first wide angle, resolved 68 l/mm. Even Jim Nichols' century old Ross #6 rapid rectilinear lens can more than meet that standard. And on a 4/3 frame size too! http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/OldNick/Mocking+Bird.jpg.html I agree with most of the image quality criteria proposed, especially those which deal with the image's emotional impact, but I wonder why many LUG posts seem to obsess over the latest and greatest Leica lenses and the size of the latest electronic sensors. While these may be interesting topics in themselves, they have almost nothing to do with the pictures posted on the LUG and viewed on a computer screen. Follow Dr. Ted and not Irwin Puts. Larry Z