Does it matter with what lens ?take a photo of a white wall using an aperture of f/22. if the wall has texture, focus to infinity and take the shot "at macro distance" to the wall, to make the texture as blurry as possible.
Your sensor looks very clean. I still have this issue on my 7d m2. I tried to clean the sensor with a cotton cloth, but I can’t really push to much the cloth as I don’t want to damage anything. Did you sprayed any solution on when cleaning ?I have the cleaning kits and following directions, they work really well. Make sure you order the right size kit for your sensor. There are some great youtube videos that show how to do it. Best advice on the swab sticks, don't push hard!
Also, instead of the white card, I did the following:
Nikon D7100 sensor cleaning, before and after.
I was astounded at the test shot of the before cleaning I did on that sensor. I was scared at first, but with youtube video help and my sensor cleaning kit, the difference is amazing.
I set the camera to ISO 100, aperture f/16 (highest for the 50mm lens), pointed at a blue sky and took two test shots. Then did the cleaning and repeated the test shots. In post edit, I set the dehaze slider in lightroom classic to maximum and that brought out every little spot and smudge like magic. This was a seriously dirty sensor, even though I had cleaned it last year once.
I hope this helps! I did one more cleaning afterward because there were still some areas that I wasn't happy with.
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No, but the higher F value you have the easier it it is to see the spots.Does it matter with what lens ?
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