Making a digital camera is a project that appears easy enough, but it’s one whose complexity increases depending on the level to which a designer is prepared to go. At the simplest a Raspberr…
This is super interesting, and a project I'm gonna keep an eye on. Not least of all because I've got a good selection of E-mount lenses.
One thing that's gonna be a struggle is all the specific lens corrections in photo software obviously will not be present for this. I wonder if the body behaves optically similarly enough to an existing Sony camera to be able to reuse those profiles.
It would be super cheap to make a laser difraction grid. You could map the lense deformation because you know the lines on the grid are straight. This would be solely for mapping the properties of the lens / mount and how to handle defamation profiles. Once you dial in the lens you probably wouldn't need to run it again assuming it can id the lens when you mount it.
I would say you could use red green and blue lasers and look at convergence, But I'm not sure in any decent hardware that that would actually be off
Edit: you should note, iPhone already does this for face ID. It's not really that much of a stretch to make it go the other way.
They have an incredibly high degree of accuracy. It's the same thing iPhones are using for face ID. And if you needed it to be easier it doesn't have to be straight lines as long as it's dots in known locations
If the sensor is the same size the lens corrections should be identical. Now if it communicates focal length info into the metadata (on a zoom lens), or any data for that matter, that's a different issue
I believe focal length & aperture EXIF metadata do factor into modern lens correction profiles
It's worth highlighting that the profiles are typically based on the combination of a lens and a body, one lens used on two different camera bodies would result in two different profiles being used