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Can you explain why stopping down causes image issues with the P4P? Considering most pics are landscape a deeper depth of field would be desirable as long as the shutter speed is sufficient. Also stopping down usually improves edge to edge sharpness on most any lens especially wide angle.Switch all settings to "manual", that means: aperture, shutter speed, ISO and color temperature are all up to you. If you plan to shoot RAW stills, set the picture style to "NONE - 0/0/0" in order to have a preview image that reflects the image you will be starting with in photoshop, lightroom or whatever photo editor you have access to. If you plan to shoot only jpegs, use whatever picture style suits your taste because that look will be "baked" into the final image file. Finally, start experimenting using the various camera settings and learn the fundamentals of photography!
Tip: setting your aperture somewhere between "wide-open" and f/5.6, and the ISO as close to 100 as possible are ideal for the P4P's camera. It's no DSLR so you will run into image issues with a closed-down aperture and/or high ISO.
Can you explain why stopping down causes image issues with the P4P? Considering most pics are landscape a deeper depth of field would be desirable as long as the shutter speed is sufficient. Also stopping down usually improves edge to edge sharpness on most any lens especially wide angle.
Here is why PhantomPhreak. These are tiny sensors still at an inch big. And not sure why your wanting more depth of field than these really wide lenses provide. Everything is way out there at infinity man. But also, most lenses are the sharpest at a stop or so from wide open. This lens is best between f4 to 6.3 or so. This is true for edge to edge sharpness as well. Stopping down further would be only if you were gonna put something up pretty close to your drone and you wanted all your background in focus too. Usually in that case I would think you want a slightly shorter DOF so your subject popped out a tad. Hope that helps man. Jim above beat me to the answer! LOLCan you explain why stopping down causes image issues with the P4P? Considering most pics are landscape a deeper depth of field would be desirable as long as the shutter speed is sufficient. Also stopping down usually improves edge to edge sharpness on most any lens especially wide angle.
Can you explain why stopping down causes image issues with the P4P? Considering most pics are landscape a deeper depth of field would be desirable as long as the shutter speed is sufficient. Also stopping down usually improves edge to edge sharpness on most any lens especially wide angle.
I am a DSLR guy and I understand diffraction but that usually isn't an issue until about f18-20. I am guessing its a limit of the large sensor out resolving the quality of the lens. I am new to the P4 so I am still playing and testing. Thanks for the reply.Google 'diffraction' to learn in depth what happens when a lens is used at a very small aperture. There is a 'sweet spot' with all lenses that utilizes the best area of the lens AND avoids the diffraction issue. I have been told by a couple of people that anything closed down more than f/5.6 will result in some overall loss of sharpness. You are correct that the DOF will be greater, but the overall sharpness will start to suffer.
There may be times when DOF is the critical issue and you need to stop way down, but that should be balanced with the knowledge that diffraction will start to raise its head.
I am a DSLR guy and I understand diffraction but that usually isn't an issue until about f18-20. I am guessing its a limit of the large sensor out resolving the quality of the lens. I am new to the P4 so I am still playing and testing. Thanks for the reply.
Spot on Jim! Great info man!At f/11 the airy disk starts to get larger than the pixel size on a 5D MkIII. At f/22, the airy disk is about 4 pixels in size, though the center part of it is the predominant feature. That aside, f/8 - f/11 seem to almost always be the sweet spot in full frame lenses whereas f/16-f/22 were the sweet spot on most 4x5 lenses that I owned way back when.
It also has to do with the part of the lens that produces the sharpest image. Wide open, the center of the frame is created from almost ALL of the glass and this means ALL of the glass has to be perfect to be perfectly sharp. Stop down to f/16 and now you are requiring about 1/64th of the surface area of the lens to be 'perfect' in order to focus something perfectly in the center of the frame. The way it generally works out, neither wide open nor stopped way down use the optimal sections of the glass.
I have a sweet little Olympus 35mm PC lens that is sharp as a tack at f/11 on my 5Ds. F/5.6... not nearly as good. F/16... start to see a difference there too. f/11 is the sweet spot for this lens for sure.
I have been told that the P4 Pro has its sweet spot between f/4 and f/5.6 and that seems to make perfect sense to me.
The lens on your P4 pro already has a truckload of Depth of Field before you stop it down.Considering most pics are landscape a deeper depth of field would be desirable
So basically since the Aperture is key here to sharp clear focused images. Instead of using manual. Simply use Aperture mode and lock that at 5.6. Set Iso to 100, WB to whatever type of day it is. Sunny / Cloudy, etc. The camera should handle the shutter speed. If you need to adjust EV plus or minus you can still do that to center the Histogram. However It seems to me even centered my images tend to come out slight over exposed.
THat about sum it up?
That's a pretty good setting for most work.So basically since the Aperture is key here to sharp clear focused images. Instead of using manual. Simply use Aperture mode and lock that at 5.6. Set Iso to 100, WB to whatever type of day it is. Sunny / Cloudy, etc. The camera should handle the shutter speed. If you need to adjust EV plus or minus you can still do that to center the Histogram. However It seems to me even centered my images tend to come out slight over exposed.
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