Originally posted by mee Yes I think that is where there was a large amount of movement.. for instance on this image at the bottom, left corner right above the vent fan there is a pattern over a tree limb that appears to have been swaying in wind.
http://www.yaotomi.co.jp/blog/used/PENTAX_K-3II_1001.JPG
Interested in how this behave around moving water.. lake or river..
That and MACRO with no movement is going to give phenomenal results for crop body..
That sample image is very informative. Look for things likely to move and you'll find artifacts when zoomed to 1:1., not just trees.
Check the red Ferris wheel visible behind the center building. Also follow the road and sidewalk. Many people on the sidewalk have pixellated ghosts. The ghosts of fast moving cars are less noticeable because the ghost is so far away from the main car, but you can see a lot near the center road (where distance and viewing angle have the car move fewer pixels across the frame).
---------- Post added 05-27-15 at 12:10 AM ----------
Originally posted by eraser PEF and DNG are uploading, in the meantime some JPGs. Same procedure for all shots, first shot is PS off, AF for first then switched to MF for all following shots in that set with PS ON. Some full size samples (Thanks to JohnBee for hosting):
Thank you very much for sharing those.
The last pair looks like there might have been some tripod movement.
http://199.168.184.48/eraser/IMGP0112.JPG was with pixel shift off and it looks like there's motion blur (or maybe I'm just looking at an area that's not in focus).
http://199.168.184.48/eraser/IMGP0113.JPG is with pixel shift on, and shows artifacts in tree bark and other things that don't move with the wind.
Your other samples, though, reinforce that pixel shift is for printing not on screen viewing. Fairly low res viewing on a computer screen doesn't need pixel shift's increased resolution, and heavy screen cropping with pixel shift on will make the stacking artifacts obvious. Looking forward to what happens with sharpening. I suspect that our usual sharpening methods no longer apply.