Some years ago I was doing my best to point out that in my search for “sharpness,” it was not just a matter of resolution and acutance, but results were also dependent on how well the particular lens was corrected, thus APO (Apochromatic) lenses produced, to my eyes, a better (“sharper”) image because the various chromatic, etc. aberrations had been removed. I got very little response from photographers on this issue, other than Lloyd Chambers.
Because of this apparent improvement in color and sharpness to my eyes, I gradually found myself using APO lenses, and the better the correction, the better I liked the photo results. The takeaway was that instead of just looking for greater resolution, etc., we might rather look for better color representation. Of course, this casts aspersion on the Bayer matrix sensor.
Now comes the Pentax K3II (24 Mpx) and the new, and larger, Pentax K1 (36 Mpx), with their Pixel Shift Resolution, sometimes called “Super-Resolution, which is perhaps a misleading term. What is “super” is not that it has greater resolution (more megapixels), but rather that it has more accurate color, much more accurate color.
Pixel-Shift Resolution not only effectively removes the possibility of any moiré, but without the softening effect of an optical AA filter. The Pixel-Shift mode also makes use of an EFC (Electronic Front Curtain) to avoid shutter-shake and a method whereby four exposures are taken at high speeds, while shifting the sensor by 1 pixel (in different directions) for each one. These separate images are then combined to produce a single photo with much greater appearing resolution, still at the same overall dimensions. Effectively, by taking four separate images and combining them, more light is captured, and a greater dynamic range is possible.
Using this method, no demosaicing interpolation is needed. It provides true color for each pixel and, as mentioned, it avoids the issues of the standard Bayer matrix sensor. Four complete sensor maps are recorded and combined, Red, Blue, and two Greens. Each sensor map is 14 bits, so every pixel has 56 bits of data recorded.
This Pixel-Shift feature works for still photography in the Pentax K3II, and the new Pentax K1 claims it also now works for photos of moving subjects, but I have not been able to try that.
In essence, this new camera, unlike our conventional Bayer systems, where each pixel has but a single color data-unit, the Pentax K1 in Pixel-Shift Mode captures all the color data for each pixel, with the effect of providing much clearer color and definition.
I would think that this approach would interest a lot of folks on this forum. As a still photographer, this is right up my alley. I sent my Pentax K3II camera back, and am waiting for a copy of the new Pentax K1. In the meantime, I am collecting Pentax-able lenses, and managed to pick up a Voigtlander 125mm F/2.5 APO-Lanthar in Pentax mount, the two versions of the Voigtlander 90mm (and macro), and the Voigtlander 40mm Ultron.