Quote: | I have to disagree on this one. Lens performance usually gets better with smaller aperture, because you are using the central part of the optics,
which show less faults. However, digital cameras show diffraction limits, which depend on the size and pixel density of the sensor.
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My personal experience is that a very small aperture size leads to so-called 'fringing' on sharp edges. This of course depends on camera quality, but
even expensive cameras suffer from this effect and this becomes more notable when the aperture size is very small. So, there is some optimum. You
probably are right that this is not due to lens defects but to defects/limitations in the CCD array. I'll look into that and check out what is the
exact cause of this fringing. But fact remains (from a practical point of view) that there is a certain optimum in image quality over the full range
of possible aperture sizes. |