On the Q2 Monochrom, there's no CFA, so each photosite captures a single 'true' tone, with no loss of resolution through interpolation. On color digital cameras, the CFA filters incoming light so that each photosite captures information on either red, green or blue light, and the camera's processor interpolates that data to produce a full-color image. The one significant difference between the Q2 and Q2 Monochrom cameras is, as you'd expect, the 'specially designed' 47MP sensor that comes without a color filter array (CFA). Additional toning settings (sepia, blue, selenium).Bluetooth and WiFi capabilities with Leica Fotos app. Splash and dust resistant body up to IP52.28 mm F1.7 ASPH lens with 11 elements, 3 aspherical.3.68MP OLED electronic viewfinder with 0.76x magnification.What's new | Body and handling | First impressions | Sample gallery | Full specifications The Q2 Monochrom certainly won’t be for everyone, but for dedicated black-and-white shooters there is a lot to love about this camera. The Q2 Monochrom has a 47MP sensor that only produces black and white images, a fixed 28mm F1.7 ASPH lens with 17cm (6.7 in) macro mode and a claim of better dynamic range and noise performance compared to the color Q2. The Leica Q2 Monochrom is Leica’s latest dedicated black-and-white camera, joining the M Monochrom and the M10 Monochrom manual-focus rangefinders.
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