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Sony a7III photos coming out very soft

Guest
Jan 29, 2022 Jan 29, 2022

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Have been using my Sony a7III for a while and it just seems like the photos very often turn out 'soft'. I use a Sigma 24-70 f/2.8 for most things and occasionally a Tamron 17/28 f/2.8 for wider shots. Auto-focus will look like it's selecting what I want but then when I open up the photo and zoom in the details are all very soft. The situation seems to be better up close, but something still feels off. For instance in the first shot below faces look sharp, but when you zoom in on details like the text on the sweater, rims of the glasses, etc. the details are quite soft. Nothing seems 'tac sharp'. Moreover, on the other photo of everyone taken from further away it looks clean from a distance - but if you zoom in the text on the clothing is illegible, faces are blurred, etc. 

 

Am I doing something wrong? All I've done is import and export; incl. Lightroom's +40 sharpening - the photos are significantly worse without any post-production sharpening (the second lot of photos). The settings for the first photo are ISO800, f/2.8, 1/250 and the second are ISO800, f/2.8, 1/320. I know 2.8 is pretty shallow, but there should still be at least one point that is in sharp focus... right? This seems to be the case in many instances as well, even when outdoors with clean natural light. 

 

Does this seem like an in-camera issue or a processing issue? If so, what can I do to fix it? Thanks very much for any help anyone can provide 🙂 

 

DSC07719.jpgDSC07734-2.jpg

 

DSC07719.jpgDSC07734.jpg

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Community Expert ,
Jan 29, 2022 Jan 29, 2022

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What exactly are we comparing in these two sets?

 

To properly judge sharpness, you have to view at 100%. This maps exactly one image pixel to exactly one screen pixel. Any other zoom ratio and you get screen resampling and inevitable softening.

 

Then adjust sharpening to taste.

 

That said, zoom lenses are usually slightly softer than primes. It should be sharp center (even at 2.8), but sharpness falls off very rapidly off-center. Ideal aperture is 2-3 stops down.

 

Sigma is generally very good optically, but autofocus is always the weak spot with third-party lenses. This is proprietary technology, and third-party manufacturers have to reverse-engineer autofocus. I have one Sigma lens that struggles a bit with getting proper focus. It's slightly off very often.

 

If you want an absolute reference lens to judge sharpness against, I can recommend the Sony/Zeiss FE 35mm/2.8 ZA. It's not too expensive and very handy, and yet so sharp it will bring out everything the sensor is capable of. I use it on my a7rIII, and it's still my favorite lens.

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LEGEND ,
Jan 29, 2022 Jan 29, 2022

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To add: you must view at 100% (1:1) or greater in Develop module. That one module uses a unique preview architecture and provides the most accurate preview of the image and the current settings.

Author “Color Management for Photographers" & "Photoshop CC Color Management/pluralsight"

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Community Expert ,
Jan 29, 2022 Jan 29, 2022

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This is not screenshots, but full resolution jpgs, 6000 x 4000.

Click on the images, then right click and choose Open image in new tab. Then click the image (magnifier cursor) to view at 100%.

 

These images look perfectly normal to me. Unsharpened raw files are always a bit soft.

You may want to use the Masking slider when doing sharpening, which will protect noise in flat areas from sharpening.

Hold down the Alt key to see the effect. White areas will be sharpened, black areas will be protected.

 

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Community Expert ,
Jan 29, 2022 Jan 29, 2022

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Right. Yes, these files are fine.

 

Probably a case of not viewing at 100%.

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