TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

Will Expensive Lenses Give Me Better Image Quality

Which one camera with Kit lens give best image quality?

Which camera coming with Kit lens give best among follow, view finder is not important for me
Fujifilm X-T1 IR, X-T1, X-A1, X-A2 , X-T10
Fujifilm XE1, Fujifilm XE2, X-Pro 1, X-M1, X-100S, X-100T, Fujifilm X-100
Canon EOS M3, Nikon D5300, D5500, D3300
Sony a6000, Alpha A5100, Alpha a5000, Alpha a3000, Sony SLT-A58

If there is a tie then also it’s ok, but want to know to filter this list based on best Kit lens include best quality image

Does the lens in your camera affect the quality of video it takes?

I have a Canon T2i and so far the videos I take lack a lot of luster. Could this be my fault for lack of pro video shooting ability, or is it the lens? Meaning, the lenses I have are the less expensive variety. I've heard that the lens quality really affects the picture/video quality of a camera. There are $300 lenses that I couldn't afford so I bought a $100 instead and still use the 35-55mm standard lens for most pictures and video. Gotta say the picture/video quality could be better. Is it me, or the lenses, or both?

Would a picture be sharper with a better lens?

In your case no . . because . . .

That camera with that lens is perfectly capable of sharp images in the right hands. There is nothing wrong with that lens, despite what others may have told you.

Which means your problems are operator error related, There are only a few things that cause blurry or out of focus images.

1. failure to focus accurately, trying to focus in low light using autofocus can be particularly difficult, or just failing to focus on the subject: example: http://static.photo.net/attachments/bboa...
2. using too wide an aperture, causing shallow depth of field, possible focus problems if subjects are not all in the focal plane. see example: http://library.creativecow.net/articles/...
3. using a very narrow aperture (f22 or greater), causing diffraction problems - noticeable in landscapes and focussing to infinity - see example: http://i.imgur.com/KPR7K8B.png
4. Lack of light, requiring slower shutter speeds, causing motion blurring (example: http://www.aguntherphotography.com/files/tutorial/sharpness/motion-blur.jpg ) or camera shake (example http://ahsphoto.weebly.com/uploads/1/3/0/2/13020357/9226598_orig.jpg )
5. Having your camera set to a low resolution setting, or too much compression (read the user manual!!!!). See example of compression artifacts: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/0/0c/Compression-artifacts.jpg

The first stage in sorting all of those problems is to read your camera user manual, then to get your camera off automatic mode, and start choosing your aperture settings/shutter speed depending on the subject you are photographing. For example f/4 or wider for portraits, f/8 for group shots, f/8-f/16 for landscapes, or fast shutter speeds to prevent motion blurring or camera shake. The slow shutter speed problems can be fixed by either getting more light, increasing the ISO, opening up the aperture, or using a tripod, and making sure your subject isn't moving, or a combination of all of these. The low resolution/compression problem can be fixed by changing your camera settings to maximum quality.

So, because your problem is operator error, then buying a new more expensive higher quality lens is not going to make a blind bit of difference.

TRENDING NEWS