madlantern
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I was recently trying out a GFX 100 II camera, and specifically, its 16 image pixel shift feature. I was using a 20-35 lens, on a tripod, by the side of the road.
I wouldn’t say it’s absolutely the most stable environment (I didn’t hang a weight on the bottom of the tripod to keep it stable, for instance) and there was a lot of traffic on the road. But it was still a relatively stable environment. In my cityscape shots, I don’t think it’d be convenient or practical to get any more stable than this.
But I noticed that for the pixel shift files, they all have a screen door like effect. What is causing this? Is this a matter of camera movement, or am I doing something wrong in post (never tried GFX cameras previously)
You can see it in the sky on the photo on the left (the right side is one of the component images from the 16 images series)

I wouldn’t say it’s absolutely the most stable environment (I didn’t hang a weight on the bottom of the tripod to keep it stable, for instance) and there was a lot of traffic on the road. But it was still a relatively stable environment. In my cityscape shots, I don’t think it’d be convenient or practical to get any more stable than this.
But I noticed that for the pixel shift files, they all have a screen door like effect. What is causing this? Is this a matter of camera movement, or am I doing something wrong in post (never tried GFX cameras previously)
You can see it in the sky on the photo on the left (the right side is one of the component images from the 16 images series)
