Feb
05Creative Portraits by Christopher T Martin
By admin on 05-02-2010
Tagged Under : Christopher T, Martin

Christopher Martin is an editorial and advertising 





















Feb
05
Christopher Martin is an editorial and advertising 





















Feb
01About a year ago I wrote a post on sensor cleaning for digital cameras. What I didn’t say at the time – I was really hoping I would be cleaning my sensor for the very last time because I was going to begin testing a prototype product that would protect the sensor from dust.
Well after one year I’m beginning to think I may never need to clean my sensor again! I love this product! Unfortunately, it hasn’t been available to the public until recently so I had to wait until now to write about it.
So the product is called Dust Shield and is made by Dust-Aid, the company that makes the great cleaning products I wrote about in my Sensor cleaning post. Effectively the product is a clear optic filter that is placed over the opening to the camera’s chamber sealing off the chamber and sensor. This product has a number of advantages – some not so obvious:
Of course I know what everyone is thinking – what does it do to image quality? I gotta admit, I was skeptical. Having spent some $8,000 on one of the finest cameras available, and a bunch more on top quality lenses – I did not like the idea of now adding a piece of film to the image path. My photos are our sole source of income, I just can’t sacrifice quality no matter how convenient! I had to be sure image quality didn’t suffer – here is my review.
I felt the best way to really test this product is with my absolute sharpest combination of equipment. So I mounted what I think is my sharpest lens, my Canon 100 macro, on my best camera, a 21 mp Canon 1DsIII. I used the two second timer with mirror lockup with a f-stop of /8, – probably about as good of a combination as I could get. I then mounted the whole thing on a monstrous Gitzo 1548 tripod, placed a bean bag on the camera and photographed a dollar bill taped to the wall. If I couldn’t detect softness with my best setup, then I’m not going to see it with say a lessor camera or with a softer lens like the 100-400.
Full frame version of the dollar.
For reference, here is the full-frame version of dollar. The red represents the area in which I cropped a 400×600 area of the image with the results displayed below the jump.
Without Dust Shield.
With Dust-Shield
I didn’t do any post processing - not levels, curves or sharpening.
Looking at the results, if anything, I felt like the version with the Dust Shield was just as sharp if not possibly slightly sharper. Now there is no way it could be sharper, I believe this appearance is because the “With Dust Shield” version is slightly darker. In the 10 minutes I messed around with installing the Dust Shield for the first time, I lost some ambient light, but I wanted to keep both exposures equal at 1/30 of a second so it came out a bit darker. If I was to do this test again, I would use flash as my main light source and eliminate this variable. Maybe for some reason the “with Dust-Shield” version has more contrast which would also give the appearance of a sharper image. Irregardless, this test was good enough to convince me!
Now for the bad news. Currently, the Dust-Shield is only available for the Canon 5D and 5D II. I understand they are planning on adding new versions soon. I don’t have any more myself so I unable to do any further testing because I don’t want to remove my only Dust-Shield. In fact, I’m embarrassed to admit but I miss placed my samples and have been using the same Shield for over a year now. It is safe to say, when more become available, I will be ordering more!
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Feb
01
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29
After 15 years in the advertising world as a writer, art director and designer, Christopher Wilson jumped off a cliff in 2005 to start christopherWILSONphotography. As an advertising creative, Christopher created a vast portfolio of powerful branding communications for some of the most recognized luxury brands on the planet, including Audi, Infiniti, Jaguar, Nikon, Johnnie Walker and Ritz-Carlton to name only a very few.
Now Christopher is bringing all that experience and passion to his photography – and it shows. I