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Photography Q&A
Crop vs Zoom
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<blockquote data-quote="J-see" data-source="post: 553824" data-attributes="member: 31330"><p>The problem with cropping is that the more you close in at 100%, the more the quality of the lens/cam/shot reveals itself. The larger the shot you use, the more you can downsample it for use here and thus the "better" it'll look. </p><p></p><p>If I use a full shot (6*4k) and scale it to 1000*800 for use here, it can even be out of focus to a degree and will still look pretty decent, while cropping a portion out of that same shot and use that at 1000*800 will show every issue it has.</p><p></p><p>To me, too much cropping is when quality starts to suffer. When exactly quality starts to suffer is a subjective matter; for some it is sooner than others.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J-see, post: 553824, member: 31330"] The problem with cropping is that the more you close in at 100%, the more the quality of the lens/cam/shot reveals itself. The larger the shot you use, the more you can downsample it for use here and thus the "better" it'll look. If I use a full shot (6*4k) and scale it to 1000*800 for use here, it can even be out of focus to a degree and will still look pretty decent, while cropping a portion out of that same shot and use that at 1000*800 will show every issue it has. To me, too much cropping is when quality starts to suffer. When exactly quality starts to suffer is a subjective matter; for some it is sooner than others. [/QUOTE]
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