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Sometimes the soft-edge effect doesn't affect our photos much. Your audience won't be spotting lens deficiencies on the first look; they'll be looking at your subject matter more importantly. There are some cases where soft edges are undesirable: A solid or consistent pattern/texture across the whole image will reveal itself more easily, you can see soft, sharp, soft looking left to right on the frame. A subject who partly reaches beyond the frame, for example, an arm that crops off to the right causes sudden sharp to soft.
Edge softness also reduces contrast in those effected areas.
Sometimes the soft-edge effect doesn't affect our photos much. Your audience won't be spotting lens deficiencies on the first look; they'll be looking at your subject matter more importantly. There are some cases where soft edges are undesirable: A solid or consistent pattern/texture across the whole image will reveal itself more easily, you can see soft, sharp, soft looking left to right on the frame. A subject who partly reaches beyond the frame, for example, an arm that crops off to the right causes sudden sharp to soft.
Edge softness also reduces contrast in those effected areas.
2 comments:
Great read! Those corners (and edges) are surprisingly soft even for a reduced size. What lens is that? At F/13 though, diffraction begins to set in, so something like F/5.6-8 would probably be sharper.
the lens I used is a tamron 28-75 2.8 version 1.
I find soft edges in my 18-70mm and some in 85mm 1.4 too near wide open aperature.
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