Canon 5D Mark II vs. Canon G11 – The Answer

Yesterday’s post comparing studio portraits taken with a Canon 5D Mark II and a G11 elicited a lot of comments. It was great to read everyone’s guess and their reasoning behind it.
The above image (the one on the right yesterday) is the version photographed with the 5D Mark II. A few of the commenters (Harley, Nicole, Eric…) touched on what I felt was the obvious “Tell” – the fact that the expression was better in the 5D version. There are a couple of reasons for this. The first is that I spent more time on the 5D image since it was to be the “Keeper” for Melinda. The second reason is that I found it a bit uncomfortable taking a studio portrait with the G11. Lining up the composition on the back of the LCD was a bit disconcerting. Even though the G11 has a viewfinder, the fact that it only has ~75% coverage means it cannot be used to properly line up the composition.
As I said yesterday (and the reader comments back this up), it is extremely difficult (impossible?) to discern the difference at this resolution. If I had shown these images at a size of around 1500+ pixels (long side) the difference in sharpness would become readily apparent.
Lastly, it wasn’t mentioned yesterday, but even though there was a $3,000 difference in camera cost we can’t forget something that was a major factor in the difficulty in telling the images apart – this was a studio shot using a couple thousand dollars worth of lighting equipment. The four light setup I used definitely helped to even the playing field between the cameras.
Thanks everyone for chiming in yesterday. It made for a fun afternoon reading the guesses as they came in through the comments and on Facebook. And thanks Melinda for allowing me to use her headshot session for this experiment.
3 Comments
I am well and truely shocked at the answer to be honest with you! I would have thought it was the left hand image which was the 5D but you are 100% correct, it is so difficult to tell the difference mainly becuase of the studio set up for the image. Use just the point and shoot without anything else and I bet the difference woud be HUGE even when much smaller!
I am just excited at getting mylatest photographed framed. Perhaps a post on your blog about the importance of framing your printed photographs is in your eyes?
| Daniel Smith | March 16, 2010 at 2:21 pm
We had a private discussion on this over on another forum. To me the answer is in the detail of the shots, small tell tale signs that a shot has been reduced from a much larger file..
i was right in saying it was the image on the right :)
| Robert Whetton - Dorset Events Photographer | March 16, 2010 at 5:49 pm
I was right on my guess, but I still find the left image more pleasing. There seems to be better seperation from the background and an overall softer focus. Plus the light seems to fall slightly more on the left side of her in the left hand photo, bringing her just a bit more out of shadow…
Nicely done and fun to try and guess!
| Ryan Romeike | March 17, 2010 at 11:13 am