Re: The Poor Man's 608mm APSC Superzoom
1
jackwelch wrote:
55mm (88mm equiv)
200mm (320mm equiv)
200mm (320 equiv) + 1.9x Olympux C210 TC
Very interesting results. Thanks for taking the time and effort to post your results and experiences. Results are very encouraging, and are better that I would have expected.
There are basically no teleconverter options for the EF-M native lenses. I've tried mounting small and short vintage MC4 (Vivitar 4-element) 2x TC optics to a native EF-M 10mm extension tube, and was successful in part, but with any EF-M lens it would not focus to infinity, the flange distance for EF-M seems to be too short to allow a TC. and infinity focus.
I have a lot of experience using DxO Photolab 5 with vintage lenses, and with existing lenses with modified teleconverters. If DxO doesn't have the profile for a lens or for a lens + teleconverter combo, I've gotten good at adjusting sharpness, CA, vignetting etc to compensate for the lens characteristics, producing results very much like the lenses DxO does have profiles for.
DxO's unsharp masking has the ability to do a custom adjustment for edge and corner sharpness, independent of center sharpness. It's the 'Edge Offset' setting and it acts like a second unsharp mask intensity setting that does not affect center sharpness but progressively sharpens the image to the edges and corners, with maximum effect in the corners. Using that setting you can usually achieve uniform sharpness across the frame with most lenses. For vintage lenses or soft TC's I use radius of 0.91 - 1.8 depending on the lens, intensity between 100-250 (depends on the lens) and edge offset can be as much as 100-225 over the 'original' intensity if the lens is soft in the corners.
DxO's CA settings are also very effective for vintage lenses and TCs. Maxing out the CA settings and applying purple fringing would likely get rid of most or all of the CA in the above images.
I'm curious what kind of results you could get with DxO Photolab, or other PP software, with the TC combo in this post, shooting RAW.