Is it just me, or do the bokeh in this shot look strange? It almost looks like motion blur, but the rest of the image is sharp. I shot it with my 50D and 70-200 2.8 IS (original), at 200mm and f/2.8. Just a moire pattern from the grid on the towel, perhaps?
--Ian
Comments
Hi! I'm Wally: website | blog | facebook | IG | scotchNsniff
Nikon addict. D610, Tok 11-16, Sig 24-35, Nik 24-70/70-200vr
Yes, I believe that is caused by the particular fabric weave pattern and because it is such a pure blue. Remember that blue occupies around 25% of the photosites in a Bayer imager. (There are twice the number of green photosites as either red or blue and the arrangement is generally R-G-B-G.) This is part of the reason why pure blue skies can sometimes show grain especially when you apply sharpening.
(For more information about Bayer sensor design:)
Partly too I suspect it is the image sharpening option that you set within your SmugMug account gallery setting for reduced sized images, i.e. this XL sized image probably has some simple USM sharpening applied from your SmugMug settings.
Did you apply any sharpening to the original image in post-processing?
If you think this patterning is too much competition and/or distraction from your intended subject I suggest using Photoshop (or similar), selecting the blue region and using some blur against the region. It would be best to do this against another, higher layer since blurring the blue will probably affect some of the fur detail, which you may wish to reveal manually.
BTW the reason I said that I see patterning but not color moiré is because with color moiré you will get unsightly color patterns which I don't see in this image. Color moiré is more difficult to correct.
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
Yes, I'm looking at it on LCD. I do have an old CRT sitting in the corner that I might hook up to see the difference.
I'm using the default smugmug sharpening settings -- reading up on them now. Looking at the original photo (either on SM or in Aperture) doesn't show the same effect, so I think you're right about it being brought out by the sharpening algorithm.
Aperture applied some sharpening to the original during RAW conversion by default as well, but turning it off doesn't seem to affect effect significantly.
thanks!
--Ian
Your professional online camera gear rental store
Follow us on Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/borrowlenses
Heh. I *was* using Aperture on my iMac, but last I checked Steve Jobs wasn't as cute as a baby cheetah!
--Ian
DayBreak, my Folk Music Group (some free mp3s!) http://daybreakfolk.com
The cheetah cub shot was done through glass, into a very dimly lit "nursery" exhibit, which is why it's at f/2.8 and ISO 800. It has a bunch of level adjustment (B&W) (shooting through glass the original was very washed out), white balance, about a third of a stop exposure, and a tiny bit of extra contrast and saturation, plus the default Aperture RAW file settings for the 50D. A lot of the tufty fur is out of the f/2.8 DoF.
The adult cheetah in the same gallery was shot in an outdoor exhibit, in bright sunshine, with the 1.4x teleconverter on the lens. It has minimal post-processing, just the Aperture RAW settings, plus the same third of a stop and tiny bit of contrast/saturation.
Here's another shot of the baby cheetah, SOOC, nothing but the default Aperture RAW conversion settings:
--Ian