Tue Sep 29, 2020 11:38 am
I dare to contradict here, as much as I also like to judge lenses by their 'feeling' too.
A mirror helps normally, you just keep it flat on the chart and center the camera in the mirror image. A lens must be extremely de-centered if that doesn't fit. Trust me, I have checked such situations by measuring the distance to the corners for reproduction purposes. A chart will then actually show you if there is de-centering by showing differences of focus in the corners.
Sure, many lenses, wides in particular, are not flat-field. But you can still check them by adjusting the focus and you'll even see how strong the curvature is. BTW, there are lenses which can adjust the field curvature.
Finally, I print my test charts in different sizes, a large one for the wides and a smaller one for longer lenses.
Any lens with acceptable quality should be good enough when you can keep some distance.
Of course, quality at infinity is another subject.
And then, a camera with 12K photocells will challenge any lens. Heck, a Red One with 4.5K was clearly showing the difference between a Zeiss compact prime and a master prime – and they were considered soft by many because of their strong OLPF.
Don't approach Resolve with your expectations from other NLEs! They are all different.
Resolve Studio 17.1.1 and Fusion Studio 17, macOS 10.15.7
iMac 2017 Radeon Pro 580 8 GB VRAM, 32 GB RAM
2018 Mac mini 16 GB RAM, eGFX Breakway RX 580 MacOS 10.14.6