Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/08/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]A friend took some photos of me with his cellphone at a party I was shooting with my M8. The light was a combination of tungsten and cloudy-dull window light. <http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/pklein/friends/Davidov30/IMG00028-20100619-2032.jpg.html> <http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/pklein/friends/Davidov30/IMG00029-20100619-2035.jpg.html> And I shot him as he shot me. <http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/pklein/friends/Davidov30/L1006540-w-1.JPG.html> <http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/pklein/friends/Davidov30/L1006542-w-1.JPG.html> Sorry, folks, no contest. Size does matter, up to a point, that point being determined by the size you want to print and display, the amount of light available, and whether all you care about is recognizable photos of your friends, or something more. All the talk about "crop circles" has a point, but I think that decent 1.5x (APS) and 1.33x (M8) crop sensors and a good, fast lens can give us plenty of quality in normal room light. So can Micro 4/3 if you don't crop. A cell phone or a small-sensor P&S really can't. Put those cameras out in bright sunlight, and some of the differences go away, at 4x6 print or Web size. But for much bigger display, and in anything but bright light, the P&S and cell phones don't cut it. The gap between a cell phone or P&S and the M8 is huge. The gap between the M8 and M9 is small, but significant, and gets more significant as available dark gets darker. The gap between the M9 and say, a D700 is big--I'd say bigger than the one between the M8 and the M9, but only matters in the worst light. --Peter