This is meant to be a discussion of multi-megapixel cameras (including DSLRs and the Sony VG10 and 20) and the horrible problem of moiré.
I have a Nikon D5100 and in spite of the warnings against this camera, I like it very much. The one thing I absolutely HATE however is the moiré problems that this and other cameras like it have.
I just ordered a Caprock anti-moiré filter that should work very well if I mount it on my 35mm prime lens and use it for interviews where people ignored my suggestions to wear solid colors. The particular 35mm prime I have has no image stabilization so this will be a tripod only solution.
My other problem shooting with the DSLR is wide shots where I want to highlight buildings rather than some person in front of them. I do a lot of business ads and a nice establishing wide shot of their facility is something that I use quite a bit. I have been getting away with using stills for the wide shots, but I want to be able to have movement in front (cars, people, trees waving in the wind, ripples in any water nearby etc.)
Thus I have been experimenting with how to minimize moiré. What I have found is that nothing I do in post seems to have any effect. Various blurs, chroma blurs, etc. only seem to add lack of clarity. They have no effect whatsoever on the problem.
The one thing that does seem to help is throwing the image out of focus a little.
Here is what seems to work best so far (please, help me improve upon this if you have any ideas or knowledge):
1 Frame your shot with an aperture of about 10.
2. Zoom in all the way optically, then use the focus assist zoom to go in as close to some offending area as possible (bricks, roof tiles, shingles, etc.).
3. Go all the way to infinity. Back off slightly until the offending pattern is in focus. Go back towards infinity until the pattern blurs slighty.
4: Leave the digital zoom, reframe your shot and start shooting.
This seems to work quite well and the balance between clarity and noticeable moiré is quite nice.
Here are a few observations on this:
An f-stop of less than 10 makes the focus adjustment too delicate and the chances are that everything will look too soft.
An f-stop of more than 10 can work and add a little sharpness, but the moiré starts to be quite noticeable even focused at infinity.
Going a little shy of focus rather than blurring towards infinity has a problem in that moiré will kind of shimmer in and out throughout the zoom range. Going a little past focus towards infinity seems to keep the moire problems at bay throughout the zoom range.
The slight softness in focus is quite noticeable at full zoom and hardly even there framed wide. This is really most useful for wide shots.
Different cameras (especially with different sensor sizes and zoom ranges) very likely have different optimal f-stop ranges.
This is just the result of a couple of days experimentation. It is quite likely that there is already a work-flow that outdoes this. If so, I would love to be pointed in that direction.
I have a Nikon D5100 and in spite of the warnings against this camera, I like it very much. The one thing I absolutely HATE however is the moiré problems that this and other cameras like it have.
I just ordered a Caprock anti-moiré filter that should work very well if I mount it on my 35mm prime lens and use it for interviews where people ignored my suggestions to wear solid colors. The particular 35mm prime I have has no image stabilization so this will be a tripod only solution.
My other problem shooting with the DSLR is wide shots where I want to highlight buildings rather than some person in front of them. I do a lot of business ads and a nice establishing wide shot of their facility is something that I use quite a bit. I have been getting away with using stills for the wide shots, but I want to be able to have movement in front (cars, people, trees waving in the wind, ripples in any water nearby etc.)
Thus I have been experimenting with how to minimize moiré. What I have found is that nothing I do in post seems to have any effect. Various blurs, chroma blurs, etc. only seem to add lack of clarity. They have no effect whatsoever on the problem.
The one thing that does seem to help is throwing the image out of focus a little.
Here is what seems to work best so far (please, help me improve upon this if you have any ideas or knowledge):
1 Frame your shot with an aperture of about 10.
2. Zoom in all the way optically, then use the focus assist zoom to go in as close to some offending area as possible (bricks, roof tiles, shingles, etc.).
3. Go all the way to infinity. Back off slightly until the offending pattern is in focus. Go back towards infinity until the pattern blurs slighty.
4: Leave the digital zoom, reframe your shot and start shooting.
This seems to work quite well and the balance between clarity and noticeable moiré is quite nice.
Here are a few observations on this:
An f-stop of less than 10 makes the focus adjustment too delicate and the chances are that everything will look too soft.
An f-stop of more than 10 can work and add a little sharpness, but the moiré starts to be quite noticeable even focused at infinity.
Going a little shy of focus rather than blurring towards infinity has a problem in that moiré will kind of shimmer in and out throughout the zoom range. Going a little past focus towards infinity seems to keep the moire problems at bay throughout the zoom range.
The slight softness in focus is quite noticeable at full zoom and hardly even there framed wide. This is really most useful for wide shots.
Different cameras (especially with different sensor sizes and zoom ranges) very likely have different optimal f-stop ranges.
This is just the result of a couple of days experimentation. It is quite likely that there is already a work-flow that outdoes this. If so, I would love to be pointed in that direction.