On 09/12/2012 5:07 AM, Larry Colen wrote:

In other words, with an AA filter, a 24MP APS-C lens will definitely be 
diffraction limited by f/8.0.  Without an AA filter, assuming that the lens is 
sharp enough, diffraction is probably having an effect by f/4 or f/5.6.


Some people treat a diffraction limit as if it's a brick wall. It isn't. Diffraction has always existed in the photographic world, and is just one of many things that we juggle, and frankly, I've never felt diffraction was something that ruined a print. Lack of depth of field because the lens was too wide open has, at least in my own work, ruined more images than because the lens was stopped down past the "diffraction limit". Shooting 4x5 film, one is often shooting at very small apertures, invariably smaller than f/22, and most often much smaller than that. My most used aperture when shooting 4x5 was f/64, which, even with a 150mm standard lens is well and truly into what computer age photographers would consider mushville. It was what I had to do to get the depth of field I needed, it never seemed to cause me unsharp images.
OTOH, leaving the aperture open too wide was a sure way to ruin a picture.

Some of us run the numbers and decide something just couldn't possibly have a chance of working, some of us go out and take pictures. I suppose trotting out the old adage of bees being aerodynamically unable to fly, but the bee, knowing nothing of aerodynamics keeps zipping from flower to flower might be apt here.

--

William Robb

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