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Holiday Camera Buying Guide

December 16th, 2009 Peter 1 comment
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The winter holidays are upon us, and many photographers are out there right now weighing their options on which new camera to buy.  I have put together the following buyers guide to aid people with their decision:

Beginner/Point & Shoot

Intended uses include parties, bars, afternoons photographing your dog/kids/some ducks/etc. in the park.  You’re an attentive consumer so you know what to look for in a piece of electronics: big numbers.  The more mexapixels the better, the bigger “x” on the zoom the better, and if you can save 3 grams in weight it’s worth the extra $5.79 over that other model.

Camera-blog.net’s recommendation: Buy something that looks cool.  Consult GQ, Wired, or Men’s Journal and find the neatest-looking camera you can, or choose from the advertisement that features the hippest 30-somethings out having a good time.  Everything from a major brand under $200 is about the same anyways.

Advanced/dSLR

Intended uses include: taking 30 pictures of your cat at varying f-stops, long exposures of rush-hour traffic from a highway overpass, and wide-angle shots of cathedral interiors from your European vacation.  Be sure to pick up a “How-to” book on photography then go to every photography forum on the internet and clog it up with inane questions, lens “tests”, slightly creepy pictures you took at a local high-school girl’s volleyball tournament, comments on how good your “copy” of your kit lens is, and how much you love the “cinema look” that you get from its video mode which is in reality just crushed black levels and f/1.8 on your borrowed 85mm.

Camera-blog.net’s recommendation: Whichever dSLR under $1100 that feels the best in your hands.  Video features that you probably won’t take advantage of are an important part of your buying decision, as are flash systems that you probably won’t ever fully figure out, built-in “Picture Styles” that will forever ruin your camera-created .jpgs, and the number of $2,000 lenses that you’ll be buying (eventually!) even though you’re shopping around for the easiest $50 rebate right now.

Expert

Intended uses include: “Fine art photography” that you can show off to your pretentious friends at your monthly photo-club get-together, lens resolution charts, close-ups of a tiger’s iris at the zoo. It’s important that you look like you know what you’re doing so lots of buttons, in-camera menus that go 4 levels deep (tethered laptops are an acceptable substitution), giant petal-shaped lens hoods, and CNC’d “L-brackets” are important.  Bigger is better here!

Camera-blog.net’s recommendation: Something with a German or European name that you can be sure others will mispronounce.  Leica, Seitz, Hasselblad, etc.  Suffixes and prefixes such as -pan, hypo-, helio-, -lux, -gon, and -nar are all important to have on your lenses and accessories.  A writeup on Luminous-Landscape.com is essential to confirm your good taste in gear.  Make sure that you practice your concerned chimping face in front of the mirror before you go out on a shoot, and don’t forget to budget for an $1,800 tripod.

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Ever closer

October 14th, 2009 Peter No comments
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So we’ve all seen the new Nikon D3s, and we all agree that it’s the best PJ camera body out there. Right? Right.

Nikons newest PJ tool

Nikon's newest PJ tool

Insane ISO levels, 9fps, top-of-the-line autofocus, and all of the other features that we’ve come to expect for a high-end professional body. There are already thousands of whiny camera enthusiasts complaining about the lack of 1080p video who don’t understand that they’re largely mistaken that the 720p MJPEG is “not good enough”, but as usual they don’t realize that the videos that this thing will take in warzones, candid interviews, and on-the-spot news locations will end up as a tiny YouTube-sized stream on the web, and not on CNN’s HD broadcast.

Nikon knows that it can’t compete with Canon in video right now, so they’re sticking to what they know best and by the looks of it they’re doing a hell of a job. The biggest question that this raises is: What will Canon now come out with in response? This is Canon’s opportunity to go all-out with the best crossover still/video camera that they can possibly muster. An XLR input, an option for RAW 1080p or 2K video, full manual controls, and a form factor somewhere between a dSLR and a camcorder.

Now is your chance Canon. Nikon made their game plan pretty clear here and we’re all waiting to see if you have the smarts to match it.  Let’s see you split your professional line into 2 segments: the D3s competitor, and the indie-filmmaker’s dream-come-true.

Thanks Canon!

July 29th, 2009 Peter No comments
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Long story, short:

I was having some fairly severe focus calibration issues with my Canon 40D, which I purchased a couple of years ago from someone on the FredMiranda.com Buy & Sell Forum.  I sent it down to Canon’s Irvine, CA facility with a letter explaining the problem, and I fully expeded to shell out a couple hundred bucks for the service.

To my great surprise, not 3 hours after the UPS tracking widget on my desktop confirmed that Canon had received my camera I had an email from their service department stating that they’d re-calibrate it free of charge and ship it back to me within the week!

Not bad for an out-of-warranty used body!

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New mystery Canon lens to feature updated IS system

July 22nd, 2009 Peter No comments
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Let’s be honest: despite Canon’s greatnes when it comes to lenses, we always want to see more.  We want updates to the old ones (100-400mm update, anybody?) and we want to see some new and exciting technology put into their offerings; new versions of existing lenses are great, but it has been a while since the magicians engineers have really ‘Wow’ed’ us.

Hopefully that will change with today’s announcement.  Some new innovation in the world of IS is really exciting, and if I’m reading it correctly it looks like this will be able to adapt to movements in a way that in-body stabilization systems won’t be able to do.

More to come, as soon as it is announced!

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Sigma DP2: An in-depth review, Part 1

May 27th, 2009 Peter 7 comments
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This is a review of the much-anticipated Sigma DP2 compact camera that was released in May, 2009.

I hope to make it clear in both broad strokes and in great detail why this camera is: revolutionary, a hopeful sign of things to come, a success, and a big steaming pile of compromises.

Please read on for the full review.

Click to continue reading “Sigma DP2: An in-depth review, Part 1″

Sony Announces 3 New dSLRs, marginal improvements seen over current models

May 16th, 2009 Peter No comments
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The full press release is here.

So Sony has introduced a handful of new products for the entry-level consumer:the DSLR-A380, DSLR-A330 and the DSLR-A230, a new flash unit, and a few low-end lenses.

From two quick read throughs of the release it looks like all of them are marginal (but ultimately worthy) improvements over current models.  A few extra mega-pixels here, a slightly better tilting rear LCD there, and some systems upgrades all around.  Like most new announcements these days there is nothing to be terribly excited about, although any incremental improvements that come about during a standard product release cycle are welcome.

The real question that will be analyzed, studied, compared, and and argued over (extensively…) is: How do these new cameras and lenses compare to those of Canon, Nikon, Pentax, et cetera?  The answer, as usual, will be “Just fine, and you’ll probably never notice the difference unless you’re studying the meta-data.”

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