This gives you a wide angle lens which only really suffers a little in the corners. Compact cameras have to push their lenses to the edge of their usefulness, so what typically happens is the wide end of the focal range is allowed to create an image circle that isn’t large enough and also distort pretty severely, and the camera simply applies corrections. This is an effect caused by distortion and an image circle that is too small. So if the lighting conditions permit, you may want to try using a smaller aperture and see if you can get sharper corners. But the corners will get better when use a smaller aperture like f5.6 to f8. It is less sharp at the corners especially at wide angle. I have the G7X Mark ii and I have only shoot jpeg with it. The JPEG out of camera seems to be a bit sharper at the corners. I saw the 2 comparison photos which you posted. I cannot answer your question directly as I seldom shoot in raw. IDK - Can you show a picture to see what is wrong? This makes me think that the lens correction at 24mm (remove the barrel distortion) is done a lot better in-camera than inside of LR.Īnyone that can confirm / comment on this theory? Is there a way to improve the lens correction in LR (done using the built-in profile)?Īt this point I feel I need to give up shooting RAW or at least give up wide-angle RAW. However, when I compare the processed RAW images from LR with the JPEGs out of the camera, JPEGs look a lot better in terms of corner sharpness. When shooting RAW and wide-angle (24mm) and applying the built-in lens correction in Lightroom, the corners turn out extremely soft (which make the photos practically unusable). Overall I am pretty happy with the camera but I am facing one issue that makes RAW shooting a bit problematic. For that reason, I bought a 2nd hand G7X Mark II. I do a lot of travel photography and recently went on a trip where a DSLR was not an option.
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