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Posts Tagged ‘Meets’

Medium-format meets the modern age: Hasselblad X1D-50c shooting experience

12 Dec

Hasselblad’s X1D-50c caused quite a stir when it was announced over the summer, as its mirrorless design and relatively tiny size defied what we thought we understood about the relationship between sensor size and body bulk in digital cameras. All previous digital medium-format models, other than the Leica S series, have been DSLRs with spacious mirror box housings and forward projecting architecture, but the X1D-50c breaks that mold and harks back to the Mamiya 7/Bronica RF compact rangefinder style. More exciting perhaps is the adoption of the features that we associate with mirrorless compact system cameras, such as touch focusing and an electronic viewfinder, that bring this usually lumbering format into the modern age.

Although the price of the system is higher than those centered around 35mm-style DSLRs, it is also a good deal less than we have come to associate with the 6×4.5cm digital format. The combination of the X1D’s design, features and price made the camera popular immediately. Hasselblad has said that it took more orders in the first ten days than it had expected to take for the year – but now, of course, it has to actually deliver the product to those who pre-ordered it. My understanding is that it is almost ready and I’ve been able to shoot for a short while with the latest pre-production X1D with a 45mm F3.5 lens.

The camera itself is finished but the firmware is still being added to and refined. As such, this article should give you a good general idea of what the camera will be like when it is all done and a pretty clear idea of the image quality we can expect from the finished product.

Body and handling

The Hasselblad X1D-50c isn’t all that much bigger than a Panasonic Lumix GH4 and it will displace less water than the Nikon D810 (don’t try that at home). Size-wise, then, it feels very much like a standard DSLR. The grip is well pronounced which makes the camera very comfortable to hold and to carry, and which makes it feel secure in the hand. The controls feel quite chunky, deliberate and designed to reduce the chances of pressing something by accident. Although the dials are in slightly different places it seems as though they and the shutter release button came out of the same parts bin as those used on the H6D body. These exaggerated features lend the X1D-50c the feel of a big camera but without the size.

I’m pleased Hasselblad has adopted new buttons for the top plate instead of the slightly spongy ones used around the info panel LCD of the H6D, and it has changed the feel of those running down the side of the rear screen. The exterior of the body houses only nine control buttons plus a depth of field preview and the on/off button, so the space feels un-cluttered and simple to navigate.

The menu system is very much the same as that used in the backs for H6D, with bold icons and a large shouting print that will require reading glasses less often than the GUIs of most DSLRs. All the features are activated by touch and options can be scrolled through using the touch screen or the traditional control wheels.

Those used to traditional DSLR and CSC menus might find that of the X1D-50c sparsely populated when it comes to features and options – and it is. The menu will be gradually fleshed out as Hasselblad develops the camera, but don’t expect it to have the same number of options as a regular DSLR.

The 3″ rear LCD is clear and bright, and its 920k-dot resolution makes the display useful when focusing manually. The EVF is also very clear and its 2.36 million-dot display feels very detailed. The firmware version I was using didn’t allow playback in the viewfinder so I couldn’t check to see what that would look like, but Hasselblad tells me that will be coming soon in a further update.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Aide de Camp Camera Bag Review: Where Function Meets Style

13 May

If you’re a woman in the photography business, you’ve probably heard of Aide de Camp by now. Yeah, it’s the company that has literally took camera bag out of the box (the clumsy black box), and proved that practical can be stylish. In this post I’m sharing my hands-on review of Aide de Camp’s new offering, the elegant Nadine Camera Continue Reading

The post Aide de Camp Camera Bag Review: Where Function Meets Style appeared first on Photodoto.


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Vinpix Meets Trina Turk & Jonathan Skow

15 Sep

Vince Gonzales (VinPix) Interviews Trina Turk & Jonathan Skow

Hi FashionPhotograhyBlog.com readers. Do we have a treat for you! Today, we have a special guest at FPBlog, Vince Gonzales, LA based fashion photographer from VinPix and Pro Photo Coalition shares his interview with popular California based fashion designer, Trina Turk and her partner, photographer and fashion celebrity, Jonathan Skow. Vince met with the dynamic fashion duo at their beautiful Palm Springs home and spoke to them about their journey and processes with their retail label, “Trina Turk”.


Vince Gonzales: Trina, I have to tell you that, on this interview coming up, I don’t think I’ve had so many friends say that they wanted to help. I mean you are like a rock star! It’s like anytime I bring up Trina Turk they’re like “Oh my God, I love Trina Turk”… Your fans are very passionate and it’s really fun to see. So, you have women’s apparel, men’s apparel, textiles for the home, retail?


Trina Turk: Yes we do, and we originally started as a wholesale company so we started as a women’s contemporary collection, started wholesale and our first store was actually in Palm Springs, we opened in Palm Springs in 2002. People really associate the brand with Palm Springs although we are really more a Californian brand but since we expanded our store 2 years ago we have now space for “Mr Turk” which Jonathan is designing and you’ve got Trina Turk Residential in its own little area and I think that when people come to Palm Springs our store is often on the to do list and it’s just become a thing you do when you are in Palm Springs.

Vince Gonzales: You guys collaborate on how that brand looks when you shoot and when you design, I imagine…


Trina Turk: Well, Jonathan knows what’s going on in the design process as we are developing the collections. As far as the actual photo shoots for the look books go, it’s really Jonathan. He’s doing the casting, choosing the location etc…


Vince Gonzales (VinPix) Interviews Trina Turk & Jonathan Skow

Jonathan Skow: Well we really talk back and forth even when the first inspiration for the line starts to happen we start talking about “Oh well if the inspiration is ‘dessert road trip’ wouldn’t it be cool to shoot it at that house where we were, that we just saw”.  There are some times where the actual photo shoot is, was where we started thinking about, pretty early on about the design process.

Trina Turk: A lot of the house tours out in Palm Springs and in Los Angeles have resulted in us finding locations that haven’t been shot that much and, so it’s the architecture comes into it as well.


Vince Gonzales: That’s great! I read somewhere that you guys are always working, not in a bad way but you do these tours and you travel. You are always banking concepts and ideas and things like that…


Trina Turk: I mean it’s hard not to. Our company is 18 years old and I think that it becomes part of what we’re doing. You can’t really stop thinking about it and it’s not like there’s a clear definition between what work is and what is not work – it all goes in there.


Jonathan Skow: I think after all these years, we are actually still excited about putting a line together and say “oh, wouldn’t it be cool to do this”. It is still fun to see architecture or when you see designs, colors, prints or whatever it is. When we are travelling it’s not “oh we can’t get away from it”. We embrace it and it’s pretty much what our life is about.


Big thanks to Vince Gonzales for sharing this interview with FPBlog! Stay tuned to FashionPhotographyBlog.com for part 2 of his interview with Trina Turk and Jonathan Skow. To read more about the work of this dynamic couple you can visit Vince’s article with the couple on Pro Photo Coalition, or follow Trina Turk @ShopTrinaTurk or Jonathan Skow @MrTurk. Also, you find Vince Gonzales @vinpix.

IMAGE SOURCE
Images courtesy of VinPix & Pro Photo Coalition


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12 December, 2013 – The World’s Finest Sensor Meets the World’s Best Lenses

12 Dec

The new Sony A7r has, arguably, the finest 35mm format sensor ever made. Leica’s M lenses are, again arguably, the best 35mm format lenses ever made.

What happens with they mate? Indeed – what could go wrong?

Find out in our latest review.

 


You can win an all-expenses paid photographic expedition to Antarctica, along with air fare from anywhere in the world. The value of this prize is $ 15,000.

The Luminous Landscape wants you to try any of our more than 60 training or travel videos and our new free video player. Each purchase is an entry, and an annual subscription that includes all previous as well as new videos counts as six entries. The winner of a free lifetime subscription is also chosen from each month’s entries.

Find Out More 

 


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POD in Singapore: High-Class Hostel Meets Capsule Hotel

11 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

pod hotel bedroom capsules

Full of small surprises, this minimalist modern urban retreat blends elements of a free-for-all hostel of bunk beds for college backpackers and high-end hotels catering to business executives.

pod capsule bedroom details

At The POD in Singapore, designed by Formwerkz, guests stay in variously-sized capsules reminiscent of radical pod hotels in places like Tokyo or Hong Kong, but with warm materials (primarily wood and stone), soft lighting and tactile finishes one might expect from a traditional suite in Kyoto or Beijing.

pod hostel room types

pod hotel interior design

The bedrooms are semi-private affairs – slots in the walls you can slip into with a curtain you can pull down for privacy, but no actual door or solid space divider. A private desk folds down from the wall and private reading light lets you set your own hours for sleeping at night.

pod hotel amenities various

For security, separate cubby lockers below beds and shoe lockers in the main space let you keep valuables out of reach. Common areas provide both lounge and meeting spaces as well as private office pods for getting work or calls down out of sight.

pod space common rooms

pod hotel bathroom

The washrooms with basin sinks and broad mirrors are open and shared, but the bathroom stalls inside of them (including a smaller sink, shower, toilet and mirror) are closed and private, resulting in a blend of semi-public yet also personal restrooms .

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[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

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POD in Singapore: High-Class Hostel Meets Capsule Hotel

11 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

pod hotel bedroom capsules

Full of small surprises, this minimalist modern urban retreat blends elements of a free-for-all hostel of bunk beds for college backpackers and high-end hotels catering to business executives.

pod capsule bedroom details

At The POD in Singapore, designed by Formwerkz, guests stay in variously-sized capsules reminiscent of radical pod hotels in places like Tokyo or Hong Kong, but with warm materials (primarily wood and stone), soft lighting and tactile finishes one might expect from a traditional suite in Kyoto or Beijing.

pod hostel room types

pod hotel interior design

The bedrooms are semi-private affairs – slots in the walls you can slip into with a curtain you can pull down for privacy, but no actual door or solid space divider. A private desk folds down from the wall and private reading light lets you set your own hours for sleeping at night.

pod hotel amenities various

For security, separate cubby lockers below beds and shoe lockers in the main space let you keep valuables out of reach. Common areas provide both lounge and meeting spaces as well as private office pods for getting work or calls down out of sight.

pod space common rooms

pod hotel bathroom

The washrooms with basin sinks and broad mirrors are open and shared, but the bathroom stalls inside of them (including a smaller sink, shower, toilet and mirror) are closed and private, resulting in a blend of semi-public yet also personal restrooms .

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[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

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POD in Singapore: High-Class Hostel Meets Capsule Hotel

11 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

pod hotel bedroom capsules

Full of small surprises, this minimalist modern urban retreat blends elements of a free-for-all hostel of bunk beds for college backpackers and high-end hotels catering to business executives.

pod capsule bedroom details

At The POD in Singapore, designed by Formwerkz, guests stay in variously-sized capsules reminiscent of radical pod hotels in places like Tokyo or Hong Kong, but with warm materials (primarily wood and stone), soft lighting and tactile finishes one might expect from a traditional suite in Kyoto or Beijing.

pod hostel room types

pod hotel interior design

The bedrooms are semi-private affairs – slots in the walls you can slip into with a curtain you can pull down for privacy, but no actual door or solid space divider. A private desk folds down from the wall and private reading light lets you set your own hours for sleeping at night.

pod hotel amenities various

For security, separate cubby lockers below beds and shoe lockers in the main space let you keep valuables out of reach. Common areas provide both lounge and meeting spaces as well as private office pods for getting work or calls down out of sight.

pod space common rooms

pod hotel bathroom

The washrooms with basin sinks and broad mirrors are open and shared, but the bathroom stalls inside of them (including a smaller sink, shower, toilet and mirror) are closed and private, resulting in a blend of semi-public yet also personal restrooms .

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

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POD in Singapore: High-Class Hostel Meets Capsule Hotel

11 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

pod hotel bedroom capsules

Full of small surprises, this minimalist modern urban retreat blends elements of a free-for-all hostel of bunk beds for college backpackers and high-end hotels catering to business executives.

pod capsule bedroom details

At The POD in Singapore, designed by Formwerkz, guests stay in variously-sized capsules reminiscent of radical pod hotels in places like Tokyo or Hong Kong, but with warm materials (primarily wood and stone), soft lighting and tactile finishes one might expect from a traditional suite in Kyoto or Beijing.

pod hostel room types

pod hotel interior design

The bedrooms are semi-private affairs – slots in the walls you can slip into with a curtain you can pull down for privacy, but no actual door or solid space divider. A private desk folds down from the wall and private reading light lets you set your own hours for sleeping at night.

pod hotel amenities various

For security, separate cubby lockers below beds and shoe lockers in the main space let you keep valuables out of reach. Common areas provide both lounge and meeting spaces as well as private office pods for getting work or calls down out of sight.

pod space common rooms

pod hotel bathroom

The washrooms with basin sinks and broad mirrors are open and shared, but the bathroom stalls inside of them (including a smaller sink, shower, toilet and mirror) are closed and private, resulting in a blend of semi-public yet also personal restrooms .

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


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POD in Singapore: High-Class Hostel Meets Capsule Hotel

11 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

pod hotel bedroom capsules

Full of small surprises, this minimalist modern urban retreat blends elements of a free-for-all hostel of bunk beds for college backpackers and high-end hotels catering to business executives.

pod capsule bedroom details

At The POD in Singapore, designed by Formwerkz, guests stay in variously-sized capsules reminiscent of radical pod hotels in places like Tokyo or Hong Kong, but with warm materials (primarily wood and stone), soft lighting and tactile finishes one might expect from a traditional suite in Kyoto or Beijing.

pod hostel room types

pod hotel interior design

The bedrooms are semi-private affairs – slots in the walls you can slip into with a curtain you can pull down for privacy, but no actual door or solid space divider. A private desk folds down from the wall and private reading light lets you set your own hours for sleeping at night.

pod hotel amenities various

For security, separate cubby lockers below beds and shoe lockers in the main space let you keep valuables out of reach. Common areas provide both lounge and meeting spaces as well as private office pods for getting work or calls down out of sight.

pod space common rooms

pod hotel bathroom

The washrooms with basin sinks and broad mirrors are open and shared, but the bathroom stalls inside of them (including a smaller sink, shower, toilet and mirror) are closed and private, resulting in a blend of semi-public yet also personal restrooms .

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


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POD in Singapore: High-Class Hostel Meets Capsule Hotel

11 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

pod hotel bedroom capsules

Full of small surprises, this minimalist modern urban retreat blends elements of a free-for-all hostel of bunk beds for college backpackers and high-end hotels catering to business executives.

pod capsule bedroom details

At The POD in Singapore, designed by Formwerkz, guests stay in variously-sized capsules reminiscent of radical pod hotels in places like Tokyo or Hong Kong, but with warm materials (primarily wood and stone), soft lighting and tactile finishes one might expect from a traditional suite in Kyoto or Beijing.

pod hostel room types

pod hotel interior design

The bedrooms are semi-private affairs – slots in the walls you can slip into with a curtain you can pull down for privacy, but no actual door or solid space divider. A private desk folds down from the wall and private reading light lets you set your own hours for sleeping at night.

pod hotel amenities various

For security, separate cubby lockers below beds and shoe lockers in the main space let you keep valuables out of reach. Common areas provide both lounge and meeting spaces as well as private office pods for getting work or calls down out of sight.

pod space common rooms

pod hotel bathroom

The washrooms with basin sinks and broad mirrors are open and shared, but the bathroom stalls inside of them (including a smaller sink, shower, toilet and mirror) are closed and private, resulting in a blend of semi-public yet also personal restrooms .

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
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