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Posts Tagged ‘Hands’

6 Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography

18 Jul

One of the most challenging and misunderstood elements in posing hands and how to use them correctly. Hands are so important in an image because they can say so much. They can convey masculinity, femininity, strength, softness and between couples, they can show love and affection.

6 Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography

So the big question is what can we do with hands? How can we make them look elegant and soft? Where should they be placed to convey the most realistic emotion and feeling? Here are a few helpful tips and ideas to keep in mind for your next wedding, portrait, or fashion shoot that may help correct the most common hand posing issues.

#1 – Avoid showing the widest part of the hand

To help make hands look elegant, simply avoid having the back of the hand facing towards the camera as that is the widest part of the hand. This is important because the hands in proportion to the subject’s face can make the hands look larger than they actually are, or can make feminine hands look quite masculine. A simple twist of the wrist, so the smallest part of the hand is showing, is all it takes to change the look and feel of an image from average to wow.

Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography

#2 – Soft hands

Female hands need to appear soft, delicate, and elegant. To achieve this, it’s a matter of conveying to your bride or model to relax or soften their hands. A simple way of demonstrating how to do this is to hold your hand out then fully tense it up and then allow it to drop and relax slightly even wiggle the fingers so they are loose. Think of it like a big balloon, you’re just letting out a little air so they don’t look so hard and stiff.

Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography

#3- Bend the wrist

Bending the wrist (a slight bend so it’s not straight) is such a simple method to break a straight line and create more shape and texture in a shot. Remember the female form looks best when we can see beautiful natural curves, this includes the wrists.

Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography

#4 – Have the hands doing something that appears natural

People often ask, “What can I get my model or bride to do with her hands? I’m stuck for ideas.” This one is one of the simplest issues to address. You could have her holding the flowers, her veil, her dress, fixing her headpiece, adjusting her engagement ring, putting on perfume, touching her man softly, the list goes on. Just make sure it’s something she would normally do so it appears natural, otherwise, it may look a little posed and stuffy.

Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography

#5 – Posing hands with couples

When photographing the bride and groom, think about where you would place your hands if you were cuddling your wife, husband, boyfriend, or girlfriend. Have the bride’s hands touching the groom’s hand, forearm, chest, or face in a way that says, “I love you”.

Have the groom’s hands on the bride’s waist or on her hands while saying, “I love where your hands are”. This can really change the feel and emotion of your photos.

Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography

#6 – Don’t amputate hands or fingers

When you have two hands overlapping each other it can appear that a hand is missing due to your angle and/or crop. This can happen when the bride has her hands around the back of the groom’s neck or you’re shooting a portrait side-on (as pictured below). The hand closest to the camera is on the other hand making her look like she has no hands or the fingers are amputated. To avoid this just switch hands over so you can see finger tips from one of the hands.

Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography

Conclusion

With all these tips in mind, the most important thing to remember is that hands should be placed in a natural realistic location doing something they would naturally do. So I suggest getting a friend or model and going out and just practicing for an hour or so to see what works and what doesn’t. This way you’ll have confidence on your next the wedding day or portrait shoot.

6 Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography

The post 6 Tips for Posing Hands in Wedding and Portrait Photography by Andrew Szopory appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Hands on with Halide, a new gesture-based iPhone camera app

01 Jun

What do you get when a former Apple designer and a former Twitter developer combine forces? You get Halide — a brand new gesture-based iPhone camera app designed for those who want more control over the picture-taking process.

Designed by Sebastiaan de With, developed by Ben Sandofsky, and released yesterday, Halide — a name reminiscent of film-based photographic processes — is designed with the aim that anyone from an amateur to a pro can achieve advanced results with minimal effort.

Advanced apps like Camera+, ProCam, and ProShot offer vast shooting flexibility and go beyond the basics provided by Apple’s stock Camera app, but come with a higher learning curve. Unless you use such apps consistently, it’s hard to remember the location of various controls for a quick shot. In urgent situations, many shooters resort to the app they know best — the default Camera.

Halide aims to be the ideal, elegant middle ground between ‘too simple’ and ‘airplane cockpit,’ peacefully co-existing with the iPhone’s default Camera app and perhaps occupying at least some of the same muscle memory space.

Halide lets you compose your shot in portrait or landscape orientation.

Halide starts out shooting in smart auto mode, but a single tap calls up a manual mode where you can adjust ISO, shutter speed and white balance. The same gestures you use with the iPhone’s native camera work for Halide, though with some variations. The zoom gesture, for example, does not work for some handset models, but instead adjusts exposure, which is similar to the original Camera app’s vertical swipe gesture.

Toggle controls let you switch between automatic and manual settings, and the grid lights up when the camera is level. Tap focusing also works.

Moreover, Halide’s sole concentration on shooting still photos gives it wider latitude within that narrow task. Halide doesn’t do panoramas, video or other special effects like HDR, but it does give you an optional, real-time live histogram, Raw capture and a friendly visual interface. It’s not an editor, so you can’t use it to open a photo from your Camera Roll.

Halide focuses on three major points of interest: tactile controls, focus peaking and instant review. Smart Auto picks your ISO and shutter speeds while an EV feature lets you flick up or down to adjust exposure. Focus peaking automatically highlights in red the sharpest areas in the scene. You can enable an optional overlay grid that doubles as a level – the center tile glows when your camera is level – to help align your shot.

Automatic and manual focus and focus peaking.

Controls at the bottom of the interface let you tap to switch between auto and manual focus, as a toggle evokes focus peaking. You can also tap to focus. Finally, you can choose to shoot JPEG or Raw and customize which controls appear on screen.

When you’re ready to check out your shots, Halide lets you view your recent captures via 3D touch and quickly swipe left or right to either favorite your picks or discard rejects.

Halide runs on iPhone 5 and above — essentially any iPhone that can run iOS 10, but it works a little differently, depending on which device you own. The iPhone 6s and up supports both the real-time histogram and focus peaking. The test sample shots in this story are from an iPhone 6s. 

The single layer of controls at the top are customizable. View, save or discard shots right away.

Halide is available from the App Store now at a discounted price of $ 2.99. It is available in English, with Spanish, Dutch, German, and French localizations in progress. On June 6, the price goes up to $ 4.99. There are no plans for an Android version at this time.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Helping Hands: “Support” Sculpture Braces Venetian Architecture From Below

21 May

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

Historic architecture meets modern art on the canals of Venice, where a pair of gigantic hands emerge from the depths to lend support above the waterline.

Designed by Lorenzo Quinn, “Support” was put into place a month in advance of the 57th International Art Biennale but is already drawing massive crowds ahead of its official debut.

It was prefabricated and shipped into positioned down the Grand Canal, then assembled and positioned so that it appears to support the Sagredo Hotel, a structure dating back to the 14th century.

Like many historic buildings in the city, this one rises straight up from the water — also like others, it is threatened by the prospect of higher sea levels as well as sinking and settling of the ground below.

“I wanted to sculpt what is considered the hardest and most technically challenging part of the human body. the hand holds so much power – the power to love, to hate, to create, to destroy” says the artist.

“Venice is a floating art city that has inspired cultures for centuries, but to continue to do so it needs the support of our generation and future ones, because it is threatened by climate change and time decay.”

"Cose" interessanti. #biennaledivenezia #venezia #lorenzoquinn #biennalearte2017 #manigrandi #solocosebelle #ENERGIA??????

A post shared by Nicolas Falcone (@nic.falcone) on

Le mani sono strumenti che possono tanto distruggere il mondo quanto salvarlo e trasmettono un istintivo sentimento di nobiltà e grandezza in grado anche di generare inquietudine poiché il gesto generoso di sostenere l'edificio ne evidenzia la fragilità. #venezia#venice#casagredohotel#mani#scultura#arte#support#lorenzoquinn#igersvenezia#igersveneto#loves_united_venice#loves_venezia#loves_veneto#veneziaunica#veneto_best_pics#veneto_in#loves_united_veneto#venetissimo#ig_venice#veniceinlove#loves_united_italy#loves_united_team#loves_united_details#volgoitalia#labellavenezia#volgoveneto#loves_veneto#venezia??

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Stunning #venezia #venice #fondacodeitedeschi #rooftoop #canalgrande #biennalearte2017 #lorenzoquinn

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“Reflecting on the two sides of human nature, the creative and the destructive, as well as the capacity for humans to act and make an impact on history and the environment, Quinn addresses the ability for humans to make a change and re-balance the world around them—environmentally, economically, socially,” writes the Halycon Gallery, which represents Quinn.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

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Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

09 Feb

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

Tamron announced two zoom lens updates at this year’s WPPI show in Las Vegas – the full-frame SP 70-200mm F2.8 Di VC USD G2 and the APS-C format 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 Di II VC HLD. Technically, both are ‘updates’ to older products, but the improvements are fairly significant. This is the 70-200mm F2.8, mounted on a Canon EOS 5D Mark II.

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

The ‘G2’ 70-200mm F2.8 now carries the ‘SP’ designation, which Tamron reserves for its highest-end lenses. The lens has been completely redesigned, and the new optical design consists of 23 elements in 17 groups. These include extra low dispersion and low dispersion elements to reduce chromatic aberrations. 

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

Mechanically, there have been some changes too. Like Nikon’s new 70-200mm F2.8E, the Tamron 70-200mm F2.8’s zoom ring can be found near the front of the lens, while the focus ring is positioned closer to the camera. Feel free to argue about whether this is a good idea or not in the comments. Minimum focus distance is unequivocally improved, being reduced to 95cm (37.4″) from the previous model’s 130cm (50.7″).

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

Autofocus performance has also been improved, thanks (according to Tamron) to the inclusion of two microcomputers and a new AF algorithm. Vibration Compensation (VC) is enhanced too, and can now compensate up to a claimed 5 stops.

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

The removable tripod collar can be loosened and removed over the lens mount (as opposed to clamshell designs which can be attached and detached when the lens is mounted to a camera). The Nikon mount version of this lens now offers electronic aperture actuation, which is becoming standard on all newer Nikon lenses and should improve exposure accuracy, especially during high framerate burst shooting. 

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

Build quality seems excellent, as we’ve come to expect from all of Tamron’s new generation of ‘SP’ lenses. Dust and moisture seals (including a grommet around the lens mount) help to keep the 70-200mm safe when shooting in tough conditions. The front element is fluorine coated, which should make it easy to quickly clean off water or oily fingerprints. 

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

And here’s the 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 Di II VC HLD. Designed for APS-C format DSLRs, this wide-angle zoom covers an equivalent focal length range of 15-36mm (16-38mm equiv on Canon).

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

The biggest change in this lens compared to its 2008 predecessor is the addition of Vibration Compensation. Tamron claims 4 stops of compensation, which means that in theory, it should be possible to hand-hold exposures of up to ~1 second at 10mm. Don’t quote us on that, though.

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

The 10-24mm zoom features Tamron’s new HLD (High/Low torque modulated Drive) AF motor, for smooth and fast autofocus. We’ve only had a few minutes with a prototype lens, but just anecdotally, focus certainly seems fast. Optically, this new lens differs from its predecessor by offering more elements (16, as opposed to 12) in more groups (11, compared to 9) including one LD (Low Dispersion) lens element, one XLD glass element, one molded glass aspherical element, and one hybrid aspherical lens.

Hands on with Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 and 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 ‘G2’ zooms

Again, the 10-24mm is sealed against dust and moisture, and build quality is excellent. Like the 70-200mm F2.8 G2, versions of this lens for the Nikon mount now feature fully electronic aperture actuation, allowing aperture to be changed during live view.

We’re looking forward to getting our hands on a production sample to see whether the various upgrades have made a significant difference to image quality. 

The Tamron 70-200mm F2.8 Di VC USD G2 is expected to arrive in March for $ 1299. The Tamron 10-24mm F3.5-4.5 Di II VC HLD is slated for availability this spring for $ 499.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Video: Getting our hands dirty with the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV

26 Aug
 
Want to learn about the highlights of the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV in 138 seconds? We certainly thought you might, so we put together a video with everything you need to know.

Read more about the 5D Mark IV

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Flickr ownership changes hands as Verizon acquires Yahoo

25 Jul

Telecomm giant Verizon will acquire Yahoo and its web properties, including Flickr and photo blogging site Tumblr, for $ 4.83 billion. It seemed possible that Yahoo might sell its photo-sharing sites separately, as the company announced in March that it was accepting bids for its web properties. Today’s announcement confirms that both Flickr and Tumblr will remain a part of Yahoo as it changes hands to Verizon.

Verizon owns AOL and Huffington Post, a point that Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer spins as a positive for her company’s outlook. In a statement published on Yahoo today, Mayer emphasized that joining forces with AOL could help strengthen Yahoo’s mobile offerings.

Regulators must approve the sale before it can be finalized, which is expected to be early next year.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Hands On: RNI All Films 4.0, analog presets for Lightroom and ACR

06 Jul

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All images in the gallery above were processed using presets from RNI All Films 4.0 – Pro (the duplicate is the un-edited version for comparison). Click through for larger previews and more info on which presets were used.

Really Nice Images has announced RNI All Films 4.0, the latest version of its film simulation presets for Lightroom and Adobe Camera Raw. It will be sold in two versions, Pro and Lite. 

In the full ‘Pro’ version, 58 film stocks are organized into 5 categories including Negative, Slide, Instant, Black & White, and Vintage. And because most film stocks have several versions, in total RNI 4.0 offers more than 300 presets, 170 of which are brand new from the previous release.

Processed using the new ‘Fuji Natura 1600 – 01’ preset.

RNI specifically highlights Fuji Natura 1600, Fuji Velvia 2.0 and Fuji Pro 400H among its new film stocks, but many more have also been added. Furthermore, according to RNI, the vast majority of presets included from previous releases have been fine-tuned or completely reworked for more accurate skin tones and more realistic grain.

RNI’s film simulations are created from analyzing actual film stocks, so if you are an analog purist, this may be the easiest way to dial in the look of some of your favorite films. RNI 4.0 also now features customized camera profiles, with support for most modern digital cameras.

The software also includes RNI 4 Toolkit, a set of presets that allows users to quickly adjust parameters like grain and softness. They’re useful if you are going for a ‘very analog’ look. Though I personally found the Toolkit presets made my images look over-processed. And when working with film presets, there is a fine line between good processing and over-processing.

Once installed, RNI presets will show up in the left-most Lightroom panel. Hovering over a preset will show a quick display in the thumbnail (upper left) of what it will look like once applied.

Of course, there are quite a few companies marketing realistic film emulations and presets. Two of the most popular are VSCO Film and DxO Filmpack. VSCO Film, like RNI All FIlm, is a set of analog-like presets for Lightroom and ACR. However, unlike RNI All Film, VSCO Film is packaged into 8 different packs of presets, sold separately. Each pack goes for $ 59 and includes around 20 film stocks (each film stock has multiple variations, some have up to 10). 

DxO Filmpack 5 on the other hand is both a plugin for LR and ACR and a stand-alone program. It is sold in two editions: the Elite edition is $ 99, the Essential Edition is $ 49. The former includes 120 different ‘styles,’ 80 of which are based off of film. 

RNI All Film 4.0 also comes in two flavors, Pro and Lite. Pro will run you $ 122. The Lite version, which is stripped down and includes a curated selection of presets from the Pro version will cost you $ 59, the same as one VSCO pack. Of course, if you’re upgrading from a previous RNI Pro version, the price is cut in half, same goes if you’re upgrading from a previous RNI Lite version to RNI Lite 4.0.

Processed using the ‘Fuji Fortia SP’ preset. 

I’ve long been a user of VSCO’s film presets, but in just briefly trying out RNI 4.0, I’m eager to keep using it in the future for processing. Most of the actual film stocks (not Toolkit presets) are well-judged and there are plenty to experiment with. Not to mention, RNI 4.0 offers quite a few film stocks not available from the competition.

 You can download All Films 4.0 directly from RNI here.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Hands on with the Hasselblad H6D 50c/100c

14 Apr

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

Hasselblad claims that its new H6D is a completely new camera and is redesigned ‘from the ground up’ on a completely different platform. The new platform is one of electronics compared to the mechanical bias of its previous models, and consequently there is a good deal more communication between the back and the body – and the new HC lenses.

The general thrust is one of modernization with a mass of upgraded specification that brings the company’s flagship camera into line with the new Phase One XF body. And now of course there is the 100 million pixel sensor to match. One of the areas in which Hasselblad differentiates itself from its main competitor is in the provision of video – and 4K video at that.

The orange dot on the lens here indicates that it is part of the new HC series. The top shutter speed for the new body is 1/1000 sec, but with the new HC lens range that increases to 1/2000 sec as the sensor and lens work together to cut the exposure time in half. As the shutter is in the lens, users can synchronize flash at all speeds. The lenses have a new shutter mechanism that is able to return to the open position more quickly after closing which helps to enable the shorter exposures. The blades have new coatings to reduce friction to allow a smoother motion, and the durability of the system has been increased to the extent that the company guarantees you’ll get at least a million actuations. Hasselblad has also tripled the duration of the camera’s warranty to 36 months (if you register before September 30th – otherwise it’s 24 months).

Other key developments include:

  • A choice of 50 and 100 Megapixel backs
  • New top shutter speeds
  • Much-improved rear screen
  • A host of new connection ports
  • HD and 4K video
  • A new range of HC lenses

There are two different versions of the H6D. The H6D 50c sports a 50MP sensor and retails for $ 25995. The 100c has, as you probably guessed, a 100MP sensor and has an MSRP of $ 32995.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

The rear screens used on the 50c and 100c backs are a great improvement over those used on the previous models. They are sharp and crisp, and colors seem much more realistic than before. The resolution is 920k dots, but the improvement is as much about contrast and color as it is about the fine detail.

The touch function works very well and offers a great response, and dual touch allows pinch zooming in live view and in review modes.

Live view shooting is also offered, and while at the moment focus is manual-only with the mirror up, we’re told that Hasselblad hopes to have introduced touch AF by the time the camera comes to market at the end of the month.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

The top plate features a new screen that is a bit bigger than before and which uses slightly larger and clearer icons. The display is slightly sunken into the top plate and sits under glass which makes its low-resolution a little less user-friendly, but it is an improvement on the screen of the H5D. The button layout is almost exactly the same as before, though the orange shutter release of the H6D makes it instantly recognizable. 

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

Hasselblad is quite proud of the fact that the body of the H6D is very much the same as that of the H5D, claiming that the designers got it so right last time that nothing needed to change. The advantage, of course, is that anyone upgrading will be immediately at home with the new body and, in fairness, the H5D is very comfortable to hold and to use. Metering is still in the body though, so when you switch to a waist-level finder you lose metering and the semi-automatic exposure modes.

The in-body shutter and mirror mechanisms are the same as those used in the H5D.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

The H6D comes in two options – with the 50MP back as the H6D 50c or with the 100MP back as the H6D 100c. While the obvious difference is the resolution, it is worth noting that the 50MP sensor is 43.8 x 32.9mm and the 100MP model measures 53.4 x 40mm – almost full frame for the 6 x 4.5cm format. Clearly the difference in physical size of the sensors has an impact on the crop-factor of the lens range.

While both sensors offer video recording the 100MP sensor is capable of 4K output and uses the whole sensor area for capture – which should produce some interesting shallow depth-of-field footage. The 50c back records in HD only.

The sensors also differ in their dynamic range, with the newer 100MP sensor offering 15 stops versus the 14 stops of the 50c, as well as an ISO range of 64-12800 against ISO 100-6400.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

Below the main output ports compartment is a USB 3.0 port for shooting tethered to a computer. The USB 3.0 socket is Type-C so photographers can connect quickly even in the dark (since the slot is symmetrical), and the data rate of the socket is up to 5x that of FireWire, which previous models used.

The socket can also be used to power the camera, so portable battery packs that offer USB-out sockets can be used to supplement the camera’s own battery.

Hasselblad says that it has dramatically reduced the power consumption of the camera by managing downtime better, and users should expect over 550 shots per battery and less drain when not actually shooting.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

The ports compartment offers audio input and output so sound can be recorded via an external microphone (the camera doesn’t have its own) and so audio levels can be monitored through headphones. An HDMI socket is also provided so external field monitors can be used and so video can be streamed to an external recorder. The use of an external monitor is useful when the back is attached to a technical camera. We are told that the labeling in this example doesn’t reflect how the sockets will be marked in the production models.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

The H6D offers dual card slots, with Hasselblad choosing the CFast and SD formats. The company says that the SD slot is only suitable for shooting stills, while the potential 400MB/s data rate of the CFast slot makes it ideal for shooting 4K video. As usual, the slots can be assigned to duplicate or divide tasks, so images can be stored to both simultaneously or arranged so that JPEG files go to one and raw files to the other. 

Streaming to an external recorder via the HDMI socket will only be necessary if a large amount of storage is required, as the 100c can record raw video in 4K directly to the memory card. It only records in Raw in fact, and users take the footage to the company’s Phocus software where it can be converted to the Apple ProRes format.

Considering Hasselblad went to great lengths to emphasize that video is very much a secondary feature of the H6D the company has gone to a great deal of trouble to accommodate it. Of course, the CFast slot allows longer bursts at the maximum 3.2 fps in stills mode too.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

The main menu gives users access to all the principle settings of the camera in a clear and icon-centric display. The larger icons at the bottom of the screen switch between stills and video, as well as providing access to the detailed settings, while the smaller icons take us directly to oft-used features and functions. This menu can be customized to suit the photographer’s way of working, favorite features or to the needs of a particular job.

The Hasselbad engineers’ debugging ‘Develop’ tool icon is shown here because the camera is a prototype.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

Swiping down from the top of the main menu, iPhone-style, brings us to the main shooting interface. The display shows all the principle modes for normal shooting each of which can be accessed by directly touching the icon. A row of four physical buttons below the screen help navigation and when using the touch screen isn’t practical.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

Once an item is selected a rolling tab appears that allows that function to be adjusted. Here the aperture is being controlled, but the main screen also gives us fast access to exposure modes, drive modes, exposure compensation, white balance, ISO and focus modes. When the scrolling tab is in operation selections can be made either by using a finger on the screen or via the thumb wheel on the main grip.

Hands-on with the Hasselblad H6D

The H6D uses the same Sony sensors that are already in circulation with the Pentax and Phase One cameras – as well as in the H5D 50c. Hasselblad says that although it is using the same sensors as other brands, the 50c and 100c will produce Hasselblad-unique characteristics as it applies its own calibration to the sensors.

While the Phocus software plays a large part in the way raw files appear on the computer screen the camera’s processing will have already applied its own ‘look’ to raw files between them leaving the sensor and being stored on the memory card.

A Hasselblad R&D engineer explained that it has control of fixed pattern noise, how data is dealt with in different temperatures, the way data is dealt with after different exposure durations, tonal gradients and the way color is represented. He said that this allowed Hasselblad to have a significant impact on the look and feel of the image. 

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Small but mighty: hands on with the Panasonic GX85/GX80

05 Apr

Introducing the GX85 / GX80

The Panasonic Lumix DMC-GX85 (known as the GX80 outside of North America) is Panasonic’s latest mid-range Micro Four Thirds model. It sits in the company’s ‘GX’ series which is used to denote that it’s targeted towards dedicated enthusiast photographers but priced as a mid-range model.

It’s a 16MP model that’s capable of 4K video shooting but features a viewfinder and several features carried-over from the older GX7, including a built-in, bounceable pop-up flash.

As such, it’ll sit below the GX8 in the company’s lineup but the more budget-conscious user may well find that the GX85 offers a lot of its big brother’s capabilities. And, thanks to a redesigned shutter mechanism intended to minimize shutter shock, may even offer some practical advantages.

Body

The GX85’s body is noticeably smaller than the GX8’s. In fact it looks a little like a GX7 that’s been left in the wash and has shrunk a little. This downsizing leaves it with fewer customizable buttons, no focus mode switch and a smaller battery compartment, but most of those changes still leave it as being broadly comparable with the GX7.

Despite the lower price point, it’s still a very solid-feeling camera. Unlike the GX8, it’s not weather-sealed, but it doesn’t feel like corners have been cut, either. The body has a pleasantly dense feeling to it, with no sense of flex or weakness.

The viewfinder is borrowed from the GX7 but it no longer hinges upwards. Its 2.7 million-dot equivalent resolution translates as 1280 x 720 pixels refreshed one color at a time (a process called field sequential update). This is a 16:9 aspect ratio, which is fairly unusual. Like the GX7, the GX85’s rear screen tilts up and down, and is touch-sensitive. It’s a 3:2 aspect ratio panel with 1.04M-dots, which works out as 700 x 480 pixels.

Stills and video

One of the biggest areas in which economies have been made is in the reversion to using a 16MP Four Thirds sensor. This probably isn’t going to be a deal-breaker for many people, and Panasonic has sweetened the pill slightly by doing away with the anti-aliasing filter in front of the chip.

This lack of AA filter should allow it to capture slightly more fine detail (Panasonic claims an improvement of as much as 10%), though comes with a slightly higher risk of moiré when used with a sharp lens. Panasonic says its JPEG engine will detect and remove the false color of moiré when it detects it.

The camera also shoots 4K video at 30p or 24p (25p in the GX80 model outside North America).

Redesigned shutter

The GX85 hasn’t simply been assembled from a bin of existing parts, though. It becomes the first Panasonic to use an electromagnetically driven shutter, rather than the motor and spring arrangement used in existing models.

This allows the shutter to be opened and closed in a more controlled manner, reducing the impact of any shutter shock, as well as making the shutter operation quieter. The new design doesn’t appear to introduce much in the way of compromise: the maximum mechanical shutter speed is 1/4000 seconds, and the flash sync speed is 1/160th. This is a little bit behind the GX8’s 1/8000th mechanical shutter a 1/250th sync speed but is a match for the less expensive G7 model.

Panasonic, rather cautiously, only says that the new shutter reduces shake, not that it eliminates it. We’re told that an electronic first-curtain shutter (which obviates the need to open the mechanical shutter to start an exposure, essentially eliminating shutter shock), would require faster sensor read-out.

5-axis image stabilization

Like the GX8, the GX85 offers a Dual IS system which augments two axes of stabilization if you use a lens with built-in stabilization. Unlike the GX8’s in-body stabilisation, even without a stabilised lens the GX85 offers 5-axis stabilisation.

Most impressively, Panasonic says that the IS continues to work in all 5 axes when you’re shooting 4K video – the first camera we can think of that does this. The digital component of IS used in video requires the camera to read lines off the sensor above and below the standard output region, then use gyro sensors to predict where on the sensor the original framing is now being projected. Most sensors can’t read out a large enough section of the sensor fast enough to stabilize 4K video, but the GX85 claims to do so.

Video capabilities

The GX85 continues Panasonic’s history of offering high-end video capabilities across much of its range, with this latest camera able to shoot UHD 4K at 30p or 24p. It shoots this 4K footage as MP4s at up to 100Mbps, which is pretty respectable for a consumer-focused model. It can also capture 1080p footage at up to 28Mbps as MP4 or AVCHD.

We say ‘consumer-focused’ because the GX85 lacks not only the slightly flatter ‘CinelikeD’ color profile offered by the GH4 but also neglects to include a microphone socket, which will limit anyone with any real video-shooting aspirations. And to think we complained about the non-standard 2.5mm socket on the GX8.

The camera does, however offers the ‘Live Cropping’ feature first introduced on the ZS100 (and demonstrated in our review of that camera). This lets you specify a start an endpoint to produce 1080p footage that appears to either pan or zoom, but does so from the 4K capture – meaning you can fix the camera on a tripod and not have to worry about how smoothly you can pan or zoom. It’s a handy option if you aren’t using sophisticated editing software.

Stills from 4K

Off the back of the camera’s 4K video capture, Panasonic offers its usual array of clever modes that produce stills from 4K capture.

Top of the heap is the 4K Photo mode in which the camera captures bursts of 8MP images at up to 30 frames per second. More than simple grabs from video, this doesn’t have to be in the 16:9 aspect ratio and the camera can be set to continuously record, then present you with the thirty images before and after you choose to hit the shutter button. A handy touchscreen interface lets you choose the perfect shot.

The Post Focus mode is similar, but it racks the camera’s focus across the depth range it detects in the scene and shoots 4K video while doing so. Tapping on the point you want in-focus pulls the frame from the video that was focused at the specified point.

Finally, the new Light Composition mode again uses the camera’s 30 frames per second 8MP image capability, this time to create a composite image. The mode uses only the brightest value from a series of frames you select, so scenes such as fireworks displays can be created from multiple images.

Other new features

In addition to the upgraded shutter mechanism, the GX85 gains a couple of features that stills shooters might find handy. Rather than limiting itself to exposure and white balance bracketing, the GX85 can also bracket focus or aperture setting across several shots.

There’s also an extra monochrome mode (such things having apparently become popular of late). The L Monochrome Photo Style promises ‘deep black and rich gradation like that of B/W film.’ We’ve not yet had a chance to put it to much use but we’ll make sure to include some more examples in our forthcoming samples gallery.

Wi-Fi

The GX85 features built-in Wi-Fi, which allows remote control of the camera from a smart device, as well as opening up the option to transmit images from the camera. To make full use of this, the GX85 includes in-camera Raw conversion so that pictures can be tweaked and perfected before they’re shared with the world.

Like a couple of recent Panasonic models, the initial Wi-Fi connection is established by displaying a QR Code on the back of the camera, which can then be read by the iOS or Android app. It’s not clear whether the slightly faster NFC method has been abandoned to keep cost down or because it excludes Apple devices.

Kit options

The GX85 will be available as a kit bundled with the tiny, collapsible 12-32mm F3.5-5.6 zoom that was created for the similarly minuscule GM models. It’s not a bad little lens, though you pay for its convenient size through having to accept its modest reach. Panasonic USA says it currently has no plans to sell the camera body-only.

Panasonic’s MSRP for this combination is $ 799, which compares very favorably to the $ 999 body-only price that Panasonic asked for the very similar GX7 just two and a half years ago. Obviously the cost of technology falls over time, but $ 799 with a simple lens looks competitive with Fujifilm’s $ 699 X-E2S camera body or Nikon’s $ 899 list price for the D5500 with 18-55mm VR II zoom, not least as none of its immediate peers is capable of shooting 4K video.

Overall

Interestingly the GX85 is called the GX7 Mark II in the Japanese market and, if you place the two side-by-side, that makes some sense: it’s not radically different in spec or control layout. That gives a hint about its intentions – it may not have all the GX8’s specifications, but it has enough that it could have sat at the top of the lineup just a few years ago.

Most of the omissions compared to the GX7 (tilting viewfinder, AF/MF switch) aren’t necessarily essential features. Indeed the retention of the built-in pop-up flash actually gives it an advantage over the more expensive GX8. Sadly, there is one feature that’s been removed that we think will be sorely missed: the lack of any microphone input is likely to come as a real blow to anyone wanting a keenly-priced stills/video hybrid.

Overall though, so long as the new shutter mechanism has settled the shutter shock problem, the GX85’s capability and price mean it looks to wear both the mid-range and enthusiast labels comfortably.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Hands on: Sony FE 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6

30 Mar

Hands on: Sony FE 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6

Sony’s already had a busy year, and it just got even busier with the announcement of an update to its RX10 series and two new FE lenses: the 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6 OSS. We got to take a first look at them at a press event in San Francisco. 

Hands on: Sony FE 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6

The FE 70-300mm F4.5-5.6 is the first full-frame E-mount lens to reach 300mm. It offers SteadyShot stabilization, as evidenced by the OSS on/of switch seen here. 

Hands on: Sony FE 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6

The 70-300mm offers a minimum focus distance of 0.9m/2.9ft, a zoom locking mechanism and dust and moisture resistance. It’s fairly compact when used at the wide end…

Hands on: Sony FE 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6

…and extends quite a bit to reach that 300mm mark. For the extremely curious, we noted that the lens maintains its widest F4.5 aperture until the 85mm mark, when F5 becomes the widest option. This changes again at 157mm, at which point it stops down to F5.6.

Hands on: Sony FE 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6

Sony has posted MTF charts for the 70-300mm, and they show that this lens might be a cut above the typical telezoom. The 70-300 will go on sale in May for $ 1200.

Hands on: Sony FE 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6

And now, something a little different: the Sony FE 50mm F1.8. At $ 250 it’s going to be a much more wallet-friendly option than its 55mm F1.8 Zeiss-branded counterpart.

Hands on: Sony FE 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6

The 50mm features a 7-blade circular aperture and offers a 0.45m/1.45ft minimum focus distance. Sony emphasizes its compact and lightweight design and indeed, the lens weighs in at a svelte 186g/6.6oz.

Hands on: Sony FE 50mm F1.8 and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6

Here’s another view of that 7-blade aperture. The lens comprises six elements in five groups, including one aspherical element. Like the 70-300mm, it’s expected to ship in May. 

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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