"Kotsinadelis, Peter (Peter)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote/replied to:

>I do not shoot air conditioning vents either. You are such a "douting Thomas."
>It was a photo of a person under controlled lighting conditions. Whether you want to 
>believe it or not is your choice.
>I can give you the guy's phone # and you can call him if you doubt what I say.  He 
>owns the Nikkor and found the Tamron better. He is a pro and not a technocrat so this 
>is subjective viewing from a photographer's perspective finding the Tamron Di lens 
>better for his use on a digital body.

Peter, you're darned tooting I'm doubting many things I read and see
on the net. There could be many explanations why he saw these effects
on a small sensor. One might be that his Nikkor lens was flawed. I
have never noticed any fringing on my 10d which has about the same
sized sensor.

If the Nikon Dslr shows this, then nya nya for Canon. I have seen
these effects from a 1Ds, as shown on Luminous Landscape. I have seen
a software solution as well.

Once again, because you have seen someone's results with one
particular body and lens, do not assume that some kind of theory is
valid. We need a bit more data on this to jump to such conclusions
right now.

I'm sure both Canon and Nikon are working on the problem, meanwhile
millions go about shooting with their 'flawed' Dslrs.


Jim Davis
Nature Photography
http://www.kjsl.com/~jbdavis/
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