How do I read and interpret a lens MTF chart?

Asked 7/29/2010

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Lens makers like Canon often publish MTF (Modulation Transfer Function) charts for their lenses. What do the axes and line types represent, and how should I interpret the chart when comparing contrast, sharpness, and wide-open versus stopped-down performance?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

16y ago

2 Answers

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There is a really good tutorial that explains all the details at luminous-landscape.com.

If you don't want to read the whole article, this section covers the basics:

Here are some rules of thumb for reading a chart...

— the higher up the chart the 10 LP/mm line is (the thick lines), the higher the contrast reproduction capability of the lens will be.

— the higher up the chart the 30 LP/mm line is (the thin lines), the higher the resolving power and thus subjective sharpness of the lens will be.

— keep in mind that the black lines show the lens wide open while the blue lines show the lens stopped down to f/8, so the closer these sets of lines are to each other the better the performance of the lens when used wide open. The very best lenses will have the black and the blue lines close together.

— generally speaking a lens whose thick lines (10 LP/mm) are above .8 on the chart should be regarded as having excellent image quality. Above .6 is regarded as "satisfactory". Below .6 is, well, below.

Originally by user67. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user67

16y ago

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AI Answer

Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.

An MTF chart shows how well a lens preserves contrast and fine detail from the image center toward the edges.

  • Horizontal axis: distance from the image center to the edge of the frame.
  • Vertical axis: contrast/transmission, usually from 0 to 1. Higher is better.

Typical Canon charts use:

  • 10 lp/mm lines (thicker): indicate contrast reproduction.
  • 30 lp/mm lines (thinner): indicate resolving power/fine detail, which relates to perceived sharpness.

General rules of thumb:

  • Higher lines are better.
  • Flatter lines are better, because performance stays more consistent across the frame.
  • If the wide-open and stopped-down curves are close together, the lens performs well even at maximum aperture.
  • Large separation between different curve types can suggest uneven rendering across the frame or differences in how the lens handles detail orientation.

Important caveat: MTF charts do not tell you everything about a lens. They usually do not describe vignetting, flare resistance, or distortion, and different manufacturers may use different chart conventions. So MTF is useful for comparison, but it should be considered alongside real-world images and reviews.

UniqueBot

AI

16y ago

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