Anunnaki
my vga camera on sharp gx15 was very good in quality compared to my new ericsson Z550i 1.3 megapixel camera. the new phone's pictures look very dirty full of dots everywhere even on the highest best quality. Can anybody tell me why this is? And also if picture quality does not depend on megapixels then how does a person determine which camera will be better?
Answer
Megapixel count determines the size of the photo and assures more colors. Hopefully more colors will lead to more realistic photos.
But a camera is also very dependent on the lens to produce breat photos. In fact, the lens is the more important part of the camera. In your case, it may not matter much because camera phones use cheap and tiny lenses.
For a digital camera, the third important element is the processing/cleaning engine. This is a firmware that cleans up the digital image to remove "noise" (i.e. grain, hot pixels or dots). The drawback in using a strong cleaning engine is that it reduces the details of the photo. I imagine that if you set your camera to the "highest" photo quality, the cleaning engine is almost switched off.
The problem with setting the camera to take the highest quality image is that it can be prone to a lot of noise. Try setting your phone to take medium or low quality and see if its comparable to the relatively low quality noiseless photo by your Sharp phone.
The number of megapixels assures a bigger photo, but the size and quality of the lens is more important, and nowadays, its a race for a better cleaning engine.
If you want good quality photos, you need a more expensive phone (or better yet, a real camera).
Megapixel count determines the size of the photo and assures more colors. Hopefully more colors will lead to more realistic photos.
But a camera is also very dependent on the lens to produce breat photos. In fact, the lens is the more important part of the camera. In your case, it may not matter much because camera phones use cheap and tiny lenses.
For a digital camera, the third important element is the processing/cleaning engine. This is a firmware that cleans up the digital image to remove "noise" (i.e. grain, hot pixels or dots). The drawback in using a strong cleaning engine is that it reduces the details of the photo. I imagine that if you set your camera to the "highest" photo quality, the cleaning engine is almost switched off.
The problem with setting the camera to take the highest quality image is that it can be prone to a lot of noise. Try setting your phone to take medium or low quality and see if its comparable to the relatively low quality noiseless photo by your Sharp phone.
The number of megapixels assures a bigger photo, but the size and quality of the lens is more important, and nowadays, its a race for a better cleaning engine.
If you want good quality photos, you need a more expensive phone (or better yet, a real camera).
What is a 1.3 megapixel camera look like? (please help!)?
Q. my camera keeps getting this:
http://www.plspictures.com/share.do?invite=dE3r4hzd55zH3zaaaazo
It should have been like this:
http://media.photobucket.com/image/pls/fissazionejewls/RINGS/230336-1BB.jpg?o=12
I have the Samsung Seek and my provider is the I-wireless.
http://www.plspictures.com/share.do?invite=dE3r4hzd55zH3zaaaazo
It should have been like this:
http://media.photobucket.com/image/pls/fissazionejewls/RINGS/230336-1BB.jpg?o=12
I have the Samsung Seek and my provider is the I-wireless.
Answer
a 1.3 mp sensor is like those found on cell phones or webcams.
The results you are getting are just about right for those cameras
The sample of what you want could be achieved using a 6 mp dSLR (like a Nikon D100 or D40) using a macro lens
It seems that you have unrealistic expectations of your tiny camera.
Most people who are shooting products for sale on the Internet, use at a minimum, a 8 mp P&S or as mentioned a 6 mp dSLR camera. When shooting jewelry, some kind of light tent is used as well to provide even lighting.
a 1.3 mp sensor is like those found on cell phones or webcams.
The results you are getting are just about right for those cameras
The sample of what you want could be achieved using a 6 mp dSLR (like a Nikon D100 or D40) using a macro lens
It seems that you have unrealistic expectations of your tiny camera.
Most people who are shooting products for sale on the Internet, use at a minimum, a 8 mp P&S or as mentioned a 6 mp dSLR camera. When shooting jewelry, some kind of light tent is used as well to provide even lighting.
Powered by Yahoo! Answers
Title Post: my vga was better than my 1.3 megapixel camera???
Rating: 92% based on 9788 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author: Yukie
Thanks For Coming To My Blog
Rating: 92% based on 9788 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author: Yukie
Thanks For Coming To My Blog
No comments:
Post a Comment