Understanding Lens Contrast

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    Understanding Lens Contrast and the Basics of MTF By Mike Johnston

    Many photographers even some experienced and knowledgeable ones seem permanently

    confused about contrast, especially when the word is used to describe lenses. In photography, like the

    word "speed" (which can refer to the maximum aperture of a lens, the size of the gap in a constant-rate

    shutter, or the sensitivity of an emulsion), the word "contrast" actually refers to several different things."Contrast" in photo paper, for instance, or in a finished image, refers to overall (sometimes called

    "global") contrast, meaning how the materials distribute tonal gradation from black to white or lightestto darkest.When we talk about lens contrast, we are not talking about that quality. What we're talking about is the

    ability of the lens to differentiate between smaller and smaller details of more and more nearly similar

    tonal value. This is also referred to as "microcontrast." The better contrast a lens has (and this hasnothing to do with the lightdark range or distribution of tones in the final print or slide) means its

    ability to take two small areas of slightly different luminance and distinguish the boundary of one from

    the other.You can have a lens of very low contrast that can be made to transmit the same overall range of light to

    dark or white to black as one with high contrast. It will just show much less micro detail in the scene,

    and look relatively muddy and lifeless. Some pictorialist-era pictures actually have a full range of tones

    from white to black but show (by design) exceptionally low degrees of what we would call lenscontrast. Low lens contrast is also created when you put a "softening" filter on a lens you can still print

    the picture with an overall contrast from pure white to maximum black, but the microcontrast will be

    severely curtailed.Savants talk about resolution and contrast being the same thing. Ultimately, they do go hand-in-hand,

    because you can't distinguish contrast without resolution and you can't distinguish resolution without

    contrast. But this is for very fine detail, in the range of 30-40 lp/mm or even greater frequencies("frequency" in this sense refers to the spacing of the equal black and white lines used to determine

    lp/mm and MTF), which the eye generally can't see in prints and slides (although Ctein thinks we

    "sense" it in terms of a subjective sense of richness in gradation).

    At coarser levels (or "for larger structures," as optical jargon might put it), say 5 lp/mm, you can havemore of one than the other, and, indeed, lens designers make choices in these areas. I have one lens, the

    Leica 35mm F/2 Summicron-R, which has very high large-structure contrast, but not terribly good

    resolution. That is, if you shoot with a very fine-grained film and look at the detail under a microscopeor in well-made enlargements, you may see finer actual detail in pictures made with other lenses yet the

    Leica lens has a very high (and very pleasing!) sense of subjective "sharpness".

    To see a great visual demonstration of this, check out Canon's excellent primer on optics at the back oftheir bookLenswork(a must-read for any photographer interested in, but not trained in, optics). They

    show the same picture (of a cat) with a) poor contrast and poor resolution, b) good contrast but poor

    resolution, c) good resolution but poor contrast, and d) both good resolution and good contrast. Thiswill "key" your eye in to what is meant by lens contrast better than any verbal description can. As you

    can see from those illustrations, it has nothing to do with overall contrast of the sort we mean when we

    talk about paper grades.

    Colour Creates Contrast

    The issue is further confused by colour, since colour sometimes functions similarly to contrast. Imagine

    two areas in an image of similar value, but one red, and one green. Take a picture of this with black-and-white film, and you have one undifferentiated gray. Take a picture of it in colour, and the green

    area easily stands apart from the red area and vice-versa. Although it has nothing to do with optical or

    sensitometric contrast, colour contrast helps with definition and hence with a sense of general imageclarity. What this means is that different lenses perform differently or perhaps I should say "to different

    tastes" in black-and-white and colour. I conjecture that Leica designers used to pay most attention to

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    relatively low-cycle contrast, meaning in the 520 lp/mm range, and then let resolution fall where it

    may. This is the smartest approach (in my opinion) for black-and-white film. Lenses that have beenoptimised this way look best for black-and-white. But now that so many people are shooting in colour,

    giving a little more weighting to resolution at higher frequencies (as, say, Canon and Mamiya seem to

    do pretty consistently) and expecting colour to "help with contrast" is a smart approach, too.

    What is an MTF Chart?

    Basically, how lenses are evaluated is by looking at how well they transmit evenly spaced lines of blackand white; ten, 20, or 30 "line pairs per millimeter" (lp/mm) means exactly what it says. As these linesget more and more closely spaced, the "noise" between them blurs the edges and makes the black lines

    look dark gray and the white lines look light gray to the lens (and also to your eye, especially as you get

    farther away). As the lines get closer and closer together, pretty soon the lens can't distinguish themtonally, and the lens "sees" one undifferentiated gray. This ability on the part of the lens, charted

    graphically, is what MTF, or Modulation Transfer Function, is all about.

    MTF graphs typically chart a lens's performance at various " image heights". This just means thedistance from the optical axis, which would correspond to the centre of the negative. The exact centre

    would have a height of zero, and so forth out to the corners. Thus, the left-hand side of most MTF

    graphs corresponds to the centre of the image, and as the graph line moves to the right, it corresponds

    to areas of the negative further from the centre. So the MTF chart describes a radius of the image circlecast by the lens. Any other radius from the optical centre is presumed to mirror the one that's charted

    (which assumes the lens elements are perfectly centred, but manufacturing defects and quality control

    is another article).You'll note that most MTF charts have two graph lines per frequency, one solid and one dotted. This

    just measures object lines ("object" in optic speak corresponds to what we'd call the "subject", what the

    lens is pointed at and focused on) that are either parallel to the radius of the image circle (called"sagittal") and those that are perpendicular to the radii ("tangential"). Most lenses are unable to do

    equally well with both simultaneously.

    Technically speaking, MTF measures both contrast and resolution more or less simultaneously. In a

    photographer's reading of an MTF chart, however, generally the position of the topmost lines (typically10 lp/mm, sometimes 5) will have the highest correlation to visible lens contrast. The lowest set of

    lines (30 or 40 lp/mm) will correspond best to actual resolving power. Personally, I pretty much ignore

    the lowest set or sets of lines when reading an MTF chart.You should note here that different manufacturers provide different MTF frequency measurements. One

    company may provide 5 lp/mm graph lines, which makes their lenses look good. These lines are often

    very close to the top boundary of the chart. Other manufacturers may provide lines for 10 lp/mm as thecoarsest structures they measure. The two shouldn't be compared directly. In fact, MTF charts from two

    different sources shouldn't be compared directly, either. There are enough experimental and procedural

    variations to make direct comparisons meaningless.To get a really good idea of a lens's performance using MTF, you'd need a "family" of charts. For

    starters, every lens will perform differently at different apertures and at different distances. Just

    charting an F/16 lens for three different object distances say, infinity, close focus, and perhaps 20 x

    F, where F = focal length, would mean you'd need 21 different charts. Really, you should have chartsfor at least six (and ideally, thirty!) randomly chosen production samples, too, to account for sample

    variation. There are a dozen or so other conditions you should measure at every aperture and taking

    distance. You can see how the volume of data would quickly get out of hand for enthusiasts. But dobear in mind that when manufacturers give you one chart, it only measures performance at one aperture

    and one distance. That doesn't really tell you much, except comparatively, and it may not tell you want

    you need to know.Often, usefully (sort of), they'll provide two charts; one for the lens stopped down, and one for full

    aperture. The more closely these two charts resemble each other, the better and more consistent the

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    performance of the lens is likely to be across the range of apertures. (I say "sort of" usefully because

    open-aperture charts for an F/1.4 lens and an F/2 lens wouldn't tell you how the same lenses comparewhen they're both at F/2, which might be practical information to know.)

    Incidentally, as an aside for those of you who may have seen the articles on " bokeh" (bo-ke, the

    Japanese word meaning "blur") in the March/April 1997 issue of PHOTO Techniques, off-axis

    aberrations are typically the cause of "bad" or confused-looking blur. The relative superimposition ofthe sagittal and tangential lines of an MTF chart are one predictor of "good" or smooth bokeh. (This

    article is available as a PDF file here.)So what does an "ideal" or very good MTF chart look like? A good pair (one wide open, one stoppeddown) would show the solid and dotted lines for each frequency on the stopped-down chart more or

    less superimposed (predicting good bokeh), moving straight across the chart (predicting good center-to-

    corner consistency), with the top set of lines (coarse image structures) as near as possible to the top ofthe chart (predicting good lens contrast). Then, the wide-open chart should look as much like the

    stopped-down chart as possible (predicting consistent performance throughout the aperture range). In

    my experience, the lenses that most closely approximate this description are highly corrected shorttelephotos of moderate aperture. Designers often have somewhat more money to work with when

    designing macro lenses, so macros such as the 100mms from Leica, Zeiss, and Canon, and the Zuiko

    90mm F/2 from Olympus, probably can be said to have the best MTF charts Ive seen. (Im not being

    prejudiced against Nikon; it just so happens Ive never seen any MTF charts for Nikkor lenses.)

    A Third Definition

    So far I've mentioned overall contrast and lens contrast. The final type of contrast we have to deal withis something still different from either of the two definitions above, and this is "local contrast", or tonal

    differentiation within certain specified tonal ranges. A film/paper combination whose characteristic

    curves interrelate in a certain way can yield high highlight contrast (i.e., not much tonal discriminationin the highlights, but a greater sense of "snap" in the gradation you do see) and low shadow contrast, or

    good shadow contrast and low highlight contrast. In lenses, local contrast issues are accounted for

    mainly by flare and veiling glare, and are affected mainly by lens coatings. A lens can have exactly the

    same level of overall contrast (i.e., it will transmit the same overall range from light to dark), but itmight have much worse shadow contrast, for instance, in certain real-world situations. Meaning, there

    will not be as much separation between slightly different shades of gray in very dark areas of the

    picture. (Transmission of colour is also very much affected by the efficiency of the coatings and therelative contribution of flare.)

    The big question mark where local contrast is concerned is that almost all actual picture-taking

    situations allow flare and veiling glare (the latter an overall dulling or haze of the image similar to"flashing" an enlargement with a low dose of non-image-forming light, or fog) to contribute in varying

    amounts and varying ways. Despite lots of scientific research, there still seems to be not much way to

    quantify it exactly, or predict its contribution exactly with any given system ("system" meaning camera-lens/film/enlarger-lens/paper) in real-world situations. Flare is always present to at least some degree,

    but it is seldom present in exactly the same way in two different systems encountering two different

    situations.

    Before lens coatings were invented, lens flare was a major determinant of image quality. The bestlenses were generally the ones that allowed performance to remain high with the fewest elements,

    because there were fewer air-to-glass surfaces to create flare. This explains the lifespan of the

    exceptionally long-lived Tessar-type, despite its speed limitations. Lens coatings are of criticalimportance to modern lenses; virtually all zoom lenses and many highly-corrected multi-element lenses

    would be useless for general photography without them. Often, coating is what makes the most

    difference between an average lens and a very good one.Have you ever noticed how many early 35mm photographers tried to avoid bright sunlight? You might

    be forgiven for thinking that the decade of the 1940s was entirely overcast (and not just by the world

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    political situation). With experience as their teacher, many photographers in the '30s and '40s learned

    various clever ways of avoiding or minimizing high-flare situations. The amateur admonition to " never

    point the camera in the direction the sunlight is coming from" dates from this era. Such was life with

    "miniature" cameras before the days of multicoating.

    The Importance of Lens ContrastIn my opinion, lens contrast of fairly large image structures is a primary determinant of subjective

    optical quality in a camera lens. The old Leica 7-element 50mm Summicron was optimized for highcontrast at 5 lp/mm, for instance, and under favorable picture-taking circumstances (i.e., avoiding toomuch flare and too wide an aperture), these lenses can still yield glorious-looking pictures today.

    Also, it's very interesting to note that high apparent lens contrast can be simulated digitally, and this

    may eventually prove to be an Achilles heel for silver-halide photography where viewer appeal ofprints is concerned. "Sharpening" only improves visual microcontrast, of course, not actual resolution

    of detail. But resolution of very fine structures seldom helps pictorial photographs much, and, in my

    opinion, is an overrated property where lens quality is concerned.

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