Fuji X10 – Review Part 5 – RAW and DR400 – Versus.Fuji X10 – Review Part 6 – Saving highlights, is i.Fuji X10 – Review Part 7 – Capture Sharpening and.Fuji X10 – Review Part 8 – Reach versus pixel clar.Fuji X10 – Review Part 9 – Low Light ISO Ladder –.A lot of images look oversharpened, which would confirm the initial softness that must be compensated somehow. A few owners of the X10 have shown magnificent images, but the majority have frankly fit in pretty well with this review. So … for JPEG shooters at base ISO, I see no contest here. The LX5 is decent, and certainly better than this copy of the X10. The G12 is a good alternative if you want the longer reach. For a base ISO shooter, the XZ-1 stomps this copy of the X10. The XZ-1 makes it a clean sweep with a magnificent performance here. Obviously, a large sensor and a fast, short range lens should make things easy. Result Table – ties included, so numbers don’t quite add up The corners are all soft on the X10, and the middle line detail on the pictures (the heads for example) show moiré and other demosaic artifacts everywhere. Order of goodness: XZ-1, G12, Tie LX5 (jaggies) / X10 (softness)Īt this point, I give up. The G12 is next with the same clarity but less contrast. The XZ-1’s local contrast is magnificent. And WOW! We have a very clear ordering for the first time. It also shows how well edges are treated. Here’s one that tends to show tonal gradations as they pertain to 3-dimensionality. Order of goodness: Tie G12 / XZ-1, LX5, X10 Crop 5 – Paper Clips And it is hard to tell here if this is classic Fuji corner softness or the softness of the demosaic process. And how small can you go before you cannot read the text? The X10 suffers a bit from softness. Order of goodness: Tied G12 / XZ-1 / LX5, X10 Crop 4 – The Globe This is a difficult one to call, since the angle to the watch completely changes the visibility of the notch in the hour marks and the clarity of the writing. The watch face is another loser for the X10. This is probably the crop that caused DPReview to put their full review on hold. Order of goodness: XZ-1, G12, LX5, X10 (the X10 surprised me by losing outright.) Crop 3 – The Watch Face The wool is basically identical across the board since all do a nice 3D rendering at base ISO. The lines in the face are replaced by more moiré, and this is starting to look like a pattern (pun intended.) Especially given the sharpness shown in crop 1.īut no … we don’t. And since the X10 is shot here in its 12mp mode, we should see these lines quite clearly. This is my favourite crop, as it demonstrates 3-dimensionality in the wool and simultaneously demonstrates the ability to resolves very close lines. Order of goodness: Tied X10 (for the dog) / XZ-1 (for the coin), G12, LX5 Crop 2 – The Face and the Needle-Point Either way, the detail is magnificent, but as with other moiré-prone cameras like the Nikon D70s, there is a price. There is an interaction here from either (a) a very weak anti-aliasing filter, or (b) a strange effect in the demosaic algorithm, which of course must deal with side by side pixels in a pattern at a similar angle. But we also see moiré in the form of bands of color in the coin. The X10 easily beats the others in fine detail retention … the yellow fur on Pluto’s nose makes that abundantly clear. Starting with ISO 100 … Crop 1 – The Coin I claim fair use for the purposes of education and illustration. Obviously, these images and the comparator are copyrighted by DPReview. Panasonic might also suffer, but Canon has a world-class jpeg engine as does Fuji (for their recent CMOS EXR cameras and the X100.) They are here for completeness, but in fact I will have to do a comparison in RAW at some point to see how they really fare against one another. But for now, a lot of people are saying that this camera was meant to shoot in JPEG so let’s take a trip around to see why.Ĭaveat: Olympus do not have a world class JPEG engine. Why JPEG? The comparator does not seem to have RAW files for the X10 … that will no doubt come later when DPReview releases their long-awaited review. DPReview has some shots on their comparator and I thought I would perform one of my analyses of the image quality to see how these cameras fare against each other in JPEG.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |