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"Less Megapixels = Better Color"...

Started Oct 9, 2018 | Questions thread
grazuncle
grazuncle Veteran Member • Posts: 5,764
Re: "Less Megapixels = Better Color"...

stevo23 wrote:

Truman Prevatt wrote:

Batdude wrote:

...Do you agree with that?

I went to one of my local camera stores and there is a gentleman that has been working there for many years and he seems to know his stuff. He is in his late 60's early 70's I would say.

The guy was talking to a customer and I was kind of paying attention to the type of conversation they were having. The customer asked "Should I get a camera with a lot of megapixels and what's the difference?"

To make it really short, then the sales person asked the customer "do you want a lot of resolution or better image quality? The higher the megapixels the more resolution you will get with lots of detail. The less resolution the better the Image quality will be with better richer color".

The key is size of the pixels. On the same area - take an APS-C sensor for example - the more MP the smaller the pixel. Bigger pixels collect more light. They produce more tonal gradation and hence richer colors.

But can we back that up with any data? IE, it sounds good, but do larger pixels actually have the ability to each express a wider range of values? I don't know if that's true today.

My take on it is that smaller and more dense pixels can reproduce more color gradation.

agree.. the sampling rate per area is higher with a denser set of receptors. (you need higher quality lenses to resolve it though)

A single pixel is only going to have it's one value, so if you have two of them - only two - you will have a very limited color range. But if you have to billion, you can express better gradation along the plane of the sensor.

Now if you put that higher number of MP on a FF sensor - the pixels will be bigger, e.g. 24 MP APS-C sensor has significantly smaller pixels than a 24 MP FF sensor. For example on an APSC 24 MP equates to a pixel with linear dimensions of approximately 3.9 micro meters while on a FF sensor the pixel size will be 6 micro meters. I put 24 MP on a 44x33 medium format camera such as the GFX the pixel size would be 7 1/3 micrometer. Bigger pixels, deeper wells, more light capturing ability, higher DR and greater tonal and color richness. So bigger pixels the greater the tonal gradation so richer tones and richer colors. Nothing has changed. People went to medium format film cameras over 35 mm cameras for better image quality and to 4x5 cameras over medium format as they wanted more image quality, richer tones and colors.

This old codger is right - nothing really new under the sun. The world nor photography didn't change with digital sensors.

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