Hi Torbjörn,
A previous poster pointed out that I apply an inappropriate sharpening, and he may very well be right. I am looking into that.
The jaggies are almost for sure an aliasing artefacts, lens outresolving the sensor, but they are enhanced by sharpening. Sharpening should be the same for both the Blad and the Sony. The effects are still there with less sharpening.
What I have seen is that Lightroom, the tool I am using is about the worst raw converter in creating aliasing artefacts, so I guess I will look into the issue using other raw converters, too.
But really, the Sony Images seem a little "brittle" to me. Interestingly, Tim Parkin (OnLandscape) has looked at the "orange peel" artefacts that Lloyd Chambers reported and he attributed it to aliasing/lack of OLP filter to a great part. I have actually seen that image but I don't feel I can discuss my findings due to constraints when getting that image.
I will reprocess both shots without sharpening in LR and that applying sharpening in FocusMagic and republish, but it will take some days until I get time to do that.
You may check this posting:
http://forum.luminous-landscape.com/index.php?topic=94812.0Sandy McGuffog, the author of AccuRaw made a recommendation on that posting, here:
http://chromasoft.blogspot.se/2014/11/mini-comparative-review-of-accuraw.html so I guess he found it relevant.
What I have noticed is that LR/ACR adds a halo around high contrast structures on non OLP filtered images. That halo is always there but will be enhanced by sharpening.
Thanks for the comment, really much appreciated!
Best regards
Erik
Erik, what has happened to the image comparing the A7rII to the Blad?
Under the heading: Can the Sony replace the Hasselblad? > Sony A7rII Central crop
Slanted lines are all jagged whereas the Blad looks distinctly smoother.
And the next shot with leaves. That leaf to sky transition is not looking good. Hope the uncompressed raw can fix that.