I quess most of us read lots of reviews concerning gear we are thinking about buying. Part of the fun is trying to sort the honest reviews from those who have received a bung of some sort. After about a year of indecision, I finally pressed the buy button on a lens that I hope will move my photography forward. A 20% discount helped!
The seemingly impartial reviews I read could be basically divided into two camps. On the one hand there were those based on just real life usage (Northlight and Philip Reeve and Amateur Photographer) which were pretty favourable, and those that were more "scientific" with MFT tests and such (Camera labs) which were a bit off-putting.
But after reading too much, I find the only way to test a new piece of equipment, and to establish if it is any good, is to use it in my real life shooting situations. I took my new Laowa 15mm Zero D shift lens out to a place near home, and shot some tall buildings. I shot hand held at high ISO, but my preliminary findings, mostly line up pretty well with the reviews. This lens is no sharpness monster as the technical reviews pointed out, but Camera labs are very wrong when they say the lens is pointless if you own a 14-35 and correct in post.
But as always my own testing throws up some interesting and useful information about a new piece of kit.
How do you, if at all evaluate a new piece of equipment?
To fill the frame I was surprised how close I had to get to the building to fill the frame. One thing only personal handling can show you.
Branches are merciless exposers of defects.
Interestingly I tried to correct the uncorrected tower block shot. Capture 1 will not correct beyond a certain point and DXO Viewpoint 1 needed shrinking vertically to see plausible results. ( Maye a later version or other software can do better).