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Posts Tagged ‘Interview’

Interview: Landscape photography master Charlie Waite

07 Sep
Grand Canyon Lighting by Grant Ordelheide. Winner of the ‘My USA’ category in the 2015 USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Award.

Founded in 2006, the annual UK Landscape Photographer of the Year Award has become one of the most prestigious photo contests in the world. 2016 marks the third year of a USA-specific competition, open to entrants from all over the world to showcase inspirational images taken in the United States.

As the deadline for the 2016 USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Award approaches, we spoke to its founder, renowned landscape photographer Charlie Waite about his life and career, and his hopes for the contest.


You’re one of the best-known names in landscape photography – how did you get started?

Well originally, I was an actor. I was rather a mediocre actor for 12 years, and I photographed a lot of actors for their publicity and so on. My wife was in television, and in the 1970s she was filming down in Devon. One day I was watching her filming and I wondered off into the Devon landscape with my camera and I just found myself responding to the landscape.

Back in London my wife and I went to look at a house we were thinking of buying and the guy who was selling it asked me what I did, and I said I was a landscape photographer, which was a complete untruth.

 Loch Indaal, Scotland. Photograph by Charlie Waite, used with permission.

It turns out he was in charge of the illustrated books department at a publisher and he said ‘can I look at your portfolio?’ so over the weekend I enlarged the pictures that I’d made, showed them to him and he commissioned me to do a book.

So I went from being an out of work actor to a photographer. And it just rolled on after that.

What inspired you to continue and make a career out of landscape photography?

I felt spiritually enriched. I knew that a deep engagement with the landscape was really good for me, and really elevated me as a person and calmed me. I found that landscape photography leveled me. Fully engaging with my surroundings. A lot of people think that landscape photography has nothing to do with emotions, it’s just craft, and skill, and finding the right light and everything else but it settles me and I’m very enriched by it. I’m more in love with photography now than I ever have been before.

 Amish country, Pennsylvania, USA. Photograph by Charlie Waite, used with permission.

What’s your favorite location?

In my heart I want to say the UK, and I think in joint second place would be the USA and France. I like to call France the most undiscovered country in Europe. It’s so quiet there.

 Autoire, France. Photograph by Charlie Waite, used with permission.

What lead you to create the Landscape Photographer of the Year programs?

I didn’t think there were many people out there who loved landscape photography as much as I did. I’ve always thought that if it elevated me it could elevate other people. I hate the word ‘evangelist’, but I felt sort of evangelical, and I wanted to say ‘come on let’s get together’. I love being in the company of other photographers, and I thought we could all get together and do a good thing, and bring landscape photography to a wider audience. And the competition really has done that.

It’s brilliant to go to the annual winners’ exhibitions, with 30 or 40,000 people visiting, and seeing the pleasure they get from the images. They’re moved by the eye and the craft of the photographer that made the images. I call a photograph a production. It’s not something you ’take’.

Dancing Trees, by Paul Leatherbury. Winner of the ‘Classic View’ category of the 2015 USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Award.

I love the US, I’ve traveled there a lot, so I thought it was a natural thing to start a US version of the competition, which we’ve been running in the UK since 2006. It’s been really fun bringing it all together. I wasn’t very good at school, I wasn’t a very good actor, and I wanted to do something that might mean something to people. And that’s what drives me on. There are some great photographers out there.

My dream – what I really want to happen, is – do you remember the series ‘Earth From Above? I cannot believe what a grand, far-reaching tour that exhibition had. And what I would love to do is to take the Landscape Photographer of the Year Award in the US and UK and take the exhibition around the world. And say ‘this is what America looks like, in the eyes of some of the word’s best landscape photographers’.

Hourglass, by Ted Gore. Overall winner of the 2015 USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Award.

Is there anyone who’s come through the Landscape Photographer of the Year Awards in previous years who’s gone on to make a career out of landscape photography?

I think they all have. It’s elevated the winners hugely. It’s an amazing label, to be Landscape Photographer of the Year.

What advice would you give to an aspiring landscape photographer?

Find your signature and specialize. Don’t be a jack of all trades. Find your way of seeing. And be memorable for your particular way of seeing. I was given that advice, and it’s a bumpy ride, like acting. It’s really not easy. It’s precarious and insecure, but there are many different ways of seeing, and many ways that are still to be found. Make your images have meaning. And practise.

Click here to submit entries to the 2016 USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Award


Charlie Waite is a renowned landscape photographer and founder of Landscape Photographer of the Year Award competitions in the UK and USA.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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‘Ansel made photographs, he didn’t take them’: Jeanne Adams interview

27 Aug

Ansel Adams’ name is synonymous with landscape photography, but a new interview with Adams’ daughter-in-law Jeanne reveals more about a lesser known side of his work. The long-time CEO of the Ansel Adams Gallery talks with Advancing Your Photography’s Marc Silber, discussing the legendary photographer’s portraiture and architectural imagery, and shares some stories of Adams’ interactions with his workshop participants. 

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Exclusive interview: Behind the scenes with Canon at the Rio Olympics

05 Aug

Behind the scenes with Canon at the Rio Olympics

As sports fans around the world get ready for the official opening of the 2016 Rio Olympics, Canon’s Professional Services team are preparing too.

We spoke to Elizabeth Pratt, Director of Professional Products Marketing at Canon Professional Services about how Canon is preparing for the biggest event in the sporting calendar.

Behind the scenes with Canon at the Rio Olympics

The first shift of CPS staff, starting at 7:30AM, pauses to pose for a group photo.

What exactly are you doing in Rio right now?

I’m down here with Canon Professional Services, and there are also some folks here from our broadcast team. CPS provides event support for all kinds of things, any time a lot of media gathers — events like the Super Bowl, the Indy 500, the Kentucky Derby, the political conventions that we recently attended. These are very important assignments for photographers and we want to be on-site to ensure everything goes smoothly.

Elizabeth Pratt, Director of Professional Products Marketing at Canon Professional Services.

Elizabeth is currently in Rio for the 2016 Summer Olympics

We offer cleaning and checks on equipment to make sure that everything is working at factory spec.  Also in situations like this, for someone shooting with an older model camera we like to give them the opportunity to shoot with the latest equipment.

And then of course photographers also have a need for remote cameras, but not everybody takes six cameras to an event so they can use four of them as remotes.  So we loan additional cameras to help them out.

Behind the scenes with Canon at the Rio Olympics

With over 70 Canon staff supporting photographers and broadcasters, coordinating schedules is no easy task.

How long does it take to plan your presence at an event as big as the Olympics?

We started planning at least a year ago, just trying to determine how much equipment we were going to need to be able to support all of our customers, how we were going to get it all into and out of the country, through customs… It’s a collaboration between the home country, the CPS folks who are based in Rio, Canon USA is supporting with a lot of equipment, Canon Europe is contributing to the equipment as well, and we’re all sending staff. So the planning really starts at least a year in advance.

Behind the scenes with Canon at the Rio Olympics

Racks of lenses and professional Canon DSLRs, ready to be distributed to photographers at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.

Can you give us an idea of exactly how much equipment you’re sending?

Almost 1600 lenses and about 900 DSLR bodies. That’s EOS 7D II, EOS-1D X II and EOS 5DS cameras. We also have 78 staff. We have what we call our Professional Market Specialists, whose job is to support professional photographers and filmmakers by answering questions and giving people advice and support. In addition to these people we have logistics folks on site, and then actual technicians who are working on the cameras.

At most events we just do cleaning and checks, but here in Rio we have virtually a complete repair center set up where we’re doing much more extensive repairs than we normally do on-site.

How many languages do you have represented among your staff over there?

Twelve languages including English.

Behind the scenes with Canon at the Rio Olympics

The EOS-1D X II is a capable video camera, as well as being designed to capture fast sequences of still images.

Are you supporting any photographers in Rio who are using the EOS-1D X II for video, or for broadcast?

There are plenty of people shooting video with the EOS-1D X II – not necessarily for broadcast, but certainly several independent agencies and teams. Under the terms of the IOC, photographers are not permitted to shoot video at the Olympics but our big clients like Getty and AP are incorporating video more and more. We talk about video a lot to photographers and they’re being asked to shoot more video and to learn about video.

We’re starting to see newspapers and publications even merge departments and cross-train people [for stills and video].

Behind the scenes with Canon at the Rio Olympics

Canon has worked with Getty, which is creating a submersible remote camera setup using the EOS-1D X II and the 11-24mm wide-angle zoom, specifically to shoot underwater events at the Olympics.

How closely do you work with agency clients ahead of big events like this?

We’ve worked very closely with the big agencies in preparation for the Olympics. We have some robotic cameras down here and we worked with the agencies to develop them for their needs. These robotic solutions are amazing. You can shoot remotely on them from the press center with multiple remote cameras attached to one computer, and switch back and forth. It allows perspectives on the Olympics that we’ve never seen before.

We’ve been helping to support an underwater system, which was developed by Getty. It’s an EOS-1D X Mark II and 11-24mm lens. The camera is in an underwater housing, and it’s networked so that it can be controlled remotely. The flexibility of control is exceptional, and the 11-24mm has really nice distortion correction — you don’t have the kind of distortion at the frame edges that you might get with other wide-angle lenses.

Behind the scenes with Canon at the Rio Olympics

A Canon technician uses an illuminated loupe to check for dust on the sensor of an EOS-1D X II.

How many of this sort of major events have you personally been involved in?

I started off as a professional market specialist with Canon and my first Olympics was Athens in 2004.

We’re much more collaborative now in the way that we work with clients. We reach out to them well in advance and talk to them about their workflow and how their needs are changing. Then we customize solutions to meet those needs.

When I started with Canon years ago, we just made cameras and said ‘here you go’. Our whole mindset has really changed, to try and figure out how to change and adapt as the industry changes.

How will the next Olympics in 2020 be different?

I think we’re at a very interesting place now with technology, with the integration of 4K into DSLRs and the ability to grab incredibly high resolution, beautiful frames from that video. I think there’s potential to change the way that photographers work. I don’t want to try to predict the future but I think that’s probably going to be one of the biggest factors that influences what’s going to change and what new equipment will bring in the next four years.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Interview: Celebrity photographer Jeremy Cowart speaks to us about The Purpose Hotel

20 Jul

Imagine staying at a hotel where everything in the rooms – and the nightly rate of the room itself – benefited someone in need. That’s the idea that lodged in commercial and editorial photographer Jeremy Cowart’s imagination, and which has since evolved into ‘The Purpose Hotel’.

With a Kickstarter campaign launching this week, Cowart hopes to open the first Purpose Hotel in Nashville within three years. So why would a successful photographer switch from taking pictures of some of the world’s biggest celebrities, to get into the hotel business?

We spoke to Jeremy recently about his work, and his plans for The Purpose Hotel.


What is the Purpose Hotel?

It’s going to be a hotel where everything in the building is connected to a cause, or a non-profit. So everything you’re interacting with is helping someone, somewhere in the world. Our tagline is ‘Change the World in Your Sleep’.

The Purpose Hotel will be a for-profit hotel, so in that regard it’s a normal hotel business, we just have a very serious cause at the core of our mission, and that cause is to help as many organizations as possible.

There are a million hotels out there, and obviously some are trying to think more along the lines of giving something back, but I’m not aware of any hotel that’s doing it at the level that we’re aiming for.

What inspired you to create the concept of the Purpose Hotel?

I was on a photo shoot four years ago, and I was staying at the Standard, a hotel in LA. And the room number was designed like a name tag – it said something like ‘Hello, my name is Room 121’. And for whatever reason that inspired me, and I took it a different direction, and wondered what if that room number was a story that you felt connected to? And what if that story was a child’s face, and what if by staying in that room you were sponsoring that child?

So it started with that simple idea, and then as I was looking around that hotel room I started thinking, well, I know there are non-profits that make soaps, and shampoo… what if the TV showed inspiring documentaries from filmmakers all around the world… what if the Internet fee went to fight human trafficking… what if room service was connected to Food for the Hungry?

I just had this lightbulb moment – what if everything was helping something? And it grew from there. 

Instead of going out and buying soaps and shampoo from whoever, or artwork just to fill the hotel, we’re going to go and source those from companies that are already supporting non-profits.

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Is photography core to the concept of the Purpose Hotel?

In a way, yes. It’ll obviously still be a hotel, but as a photographer and an artist I want there to be an amazing display of both, in the hotel. I can’t wait to personally curate those galleries because I have so many friends and peers in the industry whose work I really want on the walls of the hotel.

My dream is for the whole hotel to be a living, breathing art gallery, where we sell the artists’ work, and that money goes to them. I want to help artists make a living through the hotel, and I hope that we can also give a percentage of sales to organizations that do art therapy. So that kids around the world can process their past, their history, through art therapy. I got to do that in Uganda and it was amazing.

At this point, would you say you’ve made a transition of sorts, from making a living purely from photography, to more of a philanthropic way of life?

Sure, it could be called philanthropy, it could be called being an entrepreneur. But at the end of the day I think of myself as an idea chaser. When we have those whispers of ideas, a lot of people don’t pursue them because they think they’re impossible or they think they can’t, but I love the challenge of chasing those ideas no matter how big they are.

I’m passionate about the intersection where creativity and helping people meet. If I can help the community and do it in a really interesting, creative way, I’m passionate about that.

Was there a single experience, or trip that lead you to be more interested in philanthropy?

It was a sort of building, escalating thing. From my first trip to Africa in 2005, followed up by many more trips, doing projects overseas. I’m the founder of Help Portrait, which is a non-profit where we have photographers all over the world giving portraits to people in need. So yeah – I’ve found so much fulfillment from all of those projects. 

Do you see yourself potentially making a living out of projects like this, or will you always be a commercial photographer as well?

Good question, and I’m not sure about the answer. I’ll always be a visual artist first. I think that will continue to morph into different forms – I’ll always have a camera in my hands, I’ll always shoot, but I hope that there are humanitarian projects and personal projects in my future.

What has your photographic career taught you?

Every photographer wants to build a name for themselves, and wants to be famous and all that. But I’ve learned that it’s a lot less fulfilling than you think it is. It’s not that great, it’s not going to change your life. I like to say that greatness should be used to serve a greater purpose. So how do you use greatness to do something even bigger than yourself? That’s a lesson I’ve learned, and I’m continuing to do things that are bigger than me, and which aren’t about me.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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‘Our goal is to satisfy everyone’: an interview with Fujifilm execs

16 Jul

Following the launch of the Fujifilm X-T2 last week, we sat down with senior executives from Fujifilm.

  • Yuji Igarashi, general manager of Fujifilm’s Electronic Imaging Division.
  • Takashi Ueno, manager of Fujifilm’s Electronic Imaging Group Sales and Marketing and Optical Device and Electronic Imaging Products Divisions.
  • Ryouichi Takamoto, Optical Device & Electronic Imaging Products Division, Sales and Marketing Staff.

We talked about the X-T2, Fujifilm’s plans for lenses, and why the company is putting a lot of energy into video. 

The following interview is taken from on-record portions of our conversation, and has been edited slightly for flow and clarity. 


Fujifilm now has two flagship product lines – the X-Pro and the X-T. How do you see these two lines as being distinct?

We think that the character of the two cameras is completely different. The X-Pro series are special cameras for snapshooting, reportage and so on. But the X-T2 is a multipurpose camera, so we’re trying to sell the X-T2 to DSLR users, compact camera users – all photo enthusiasts and professional photographers. That’s the target with the X-T2.

The X-Pro 2 doesn’t have a 4K movie function, because we see the X-Pro 2 as being a stills camera. But the X-T2 needed 4K movie.

The X-T2 is compatible with a new ‘Vertical Power Booster Grip’ which can accomodate two batteries, making a maximum of three in total. This takes the X-T2’s endurance to a CIPA-rated total of 1000 shots.  

Apart from the 4K movie function, what other features differentiate the X-T2?

Durability. And that doesn’t just mean toughness, but also battery consumption. That’s why we made the Power Booster grip for the X-T2. And autofocus performance. We want the X-T2 to be able to capture all subjects. The X-Pro 2 doesn’t need such fast AF, because for snap-shooting and portrait shooting it’s not necessary. But our target users for the X-T series include sports photographers.

If you look at the body shape and balance, we have the booster grip for the X-T2 which works well if you’re using telephoto lenses, whereas with the X-Pro 2 it’s designed to be more discrete, and for use with prime lenses. The body style itself is different.

Some of our readers have expressed disappointment that the X-T2 costs more than the X-T1. Why is this?

It’s a combination of two factors. One is the exchange rate, of course [editor’s note: the value of the yen relative to the dollar fluctuated significantly from 2014-16] and the other is the features included in the camera. We’ve added 4K video, a new 24MP sensor, a new shutter and so on. These factors have resulted in an increase in price.

In the X-T2, is the autofocus system different to the X-Pro 2?

Yes, the algorithm is completely different. But we’re planning to add this [improvement] to the X-Pro 2 in FW 2.0, in October. But the AF-C custom functions will only be available in the X-T2.

 

 The X-T2 offers several Canon-style AF ‘sets’, which allow the camera’s continuous autofocus performance to be tweaked depending on the subject. Although the X-Pro 2’s autofocus will be updated with firmware this autumn, these AF sets will remain unique to the X-T2.

Why did you choose to include 4K video in the X-T2?

The movie function is one of the most important functions of digital cameras. Many of our competitors had offered 4K, but we didn’t. Fujifilm is a popular company in the broadcast industry, because we’ve developed so many lenses for broadcast cameras. So we are familiar with the industry, we just been able to utilize that knowledge [until now].

Video has long been a weak area in the X-series…

Yes. Our X-Trans color filter array is more complicated than that of bayer array, but we have developed a new, very powerful processor – the X Processor Pro. This can read data faster than the processor in previous X-series cameras, which means we could add 4K movie recording to the X-T2. But we don’t think that the X-Pro 2 necessarily needs 4K.

Could 4K movie recording be added to the X-Pro 2 with firmware?

No. Because of hardware issues. We’d need to add a heatsink, which the X-Pro 2 doesn’t have because we wanted to maintain its body size.

Does that explain the slight weight increase from the X-T1 to the X-T2?

Yes.

In adding 4K video to the X-T2, were you responding to existing X-series users’ demands, or to market expectations?

People are taking more movies now. In the past, maybe it was OK for us to release video that was not great, but now, the movie specification is one of the most important reasons why someone might buy a camera. Even if someone takes primarily stills. So the importance of video has grown and grown and we’re trying to make improvements. Hopefully video will be one of our strengths in the future. Every day our X-series photographers are asking us to improve movie quality.

Despite having an articulating rear LCD screen, the X-T2 is limited to physical dial and button-based controls. It seems that touch-sensitivity is still some way off, in high-end X-series cameras.  

Why did you decide not to include a touchscreen on the X-T2?

One reason is that a key feature of the X-series is dial operation. And dial operation and touch operation are completely different, so combining them could be confusing. The typical way of shooting with X-series cameras is with your eye to the viewfinder, and to use a touchscreen you’d have to take your eye away from the finder.

Our priority for the X-T2 for now is to focus on the viewfinder. We’d like the user to use the finder primarily, with dial operation. But the X70 for example we introduced a touch sensitive screen, because that camera doesn’t have a viewfinder.

Will future X-series cameras continue to look much the same, or will you experiment with ergonomic changes?

Dial operation is part of our identity. This concept and style of operation will be maintained in order to distinguish our cameras from competitors. We also think that this design is the most intuitive for general photography.

A lot of our readers continue to be a little disappointed by the AF speed of some of the X-mount lenses. Is this something you’re working on improving?

Lenses like the 35mm F1.4 and 60mm F1.4 use DC coil motors, and the focusing elements are very heavy. For example the weight of the focusing group in the XF 35mm F1.4 is more than 100g. It’s almost unbelievable compared to most current autofocus lenses. On the other hand, in the XF 18-55mm zoom lens, the weight of the focusing group is only around ten grams.

Because of the weight of these groups in this fast prime lenses, we cannot make them focus faster. But that’s why we’re making new F2 lenses. Our 35mm F1.4 is designed for the best image quality, whereas our 35mm F2 – while we also care about image quality – is designed for fast autofocus and lighter overall weight.

Most autofocus lenses have only one focusing element, but our 35mm F1.4 for example, all of the elements in that lens move [to achieve focus].

Still on the topic of lenses, where do you see the biggest gaps in your XF lens lineup, right now?

Long focal length prime lenses, fisheye lenses, and tilt/shift lenses. Of course, the demand for these lenses is very small, and we have to prioritise. Currently we are prioritizing lenses like the 35mm F2, 23mm F2 and 50mm F2.

 Hasselblad’s X1D is a relatively compact medium-format camera. Exactly the same kind of camera, in other words, that Fujifilm used to be known for, back when a roll of Velvia was the memory card of choice for enthusiast photographers.  

Hasselblad just released the X1D – a relatively compact medium format camera. Do you think there is an opportunity for Fujfilm in this market in the future?

We’re keeping our eye on that market, and the full-frame market too, but we’re still focusing on our APS-C range.

Are you interested in attacking the full-frame market in the future?

We’re attacking this market with our X-series. And with X-Trans III, we think that when people actually see what our cameras can deliver, we think there’s a good chance that photographers will use our X-series in the future.

The question of sensor size depends on what the user wants, as an output. If you’re using a medium format camera and you definitely need that for the work you’re doing, maybe APS-C is too small. But for general use, I think our [current] APS-C sensor is comparable to full-frame image quality. I think we can satisfy most people. But in future our goal is to satisfy everyone.

Is Fujfilm committed to the sub-APS-C market anymore, or are you focused now on APS-C?

We still do well with tough cameras. Because smartphones haven’t been able to replace them. So we’ve not completely abandoned that market. As long as there’s opportunity we’ll continue to look into it.

Some manufacturers are moving into virtual reality imaging with products like the Nikon Key Mission, the Samsung Gear and so on. Is this a market segment that Fujifilm is interested in?

At the moment we don’t have anything planned.

When a photographer thinks about Fujifilm as a brand, what kind of qualities do you want them to associate with the company?

Image quality. We are a photography company – not a camera company. That’s what our boss is always saying to us (Toru Takahashi – interviewed in January). That’s very important. We are still a film maker. So image quality and color reproduction. 


Editor’s note:

In many ways, the on-record portions of this interview offer a message consistent with that delivered by Mr Takahashi and Mr Iida when I spoke to them earlier this year. Fujfilm is committing to two flagship APS-C platforms, X-Pro and X-T, and with the release of the X-T2, this strategy has reached a degree of maturity.

The similarities between the two cameras are arguably less interesting than the differences. The X-T2 is the faster of the two, and is designed to appeal to a wider audience. Not necessarily a more professional audience, but perhaps a more commercial one. Several times, the executives I spoke to stressed the importance of satisfying the needs of sports photographers and the inclusion in the X-T2 of Canon-style AF ‘sets’ is clearly intended to ease the hypothetical transition for prospective DSLR defectors. Meanwhile, 4K video (and from what we can tell at present, pretty good 4K video) is of course, a feature that is currently unavailable to most DSLR photographers, regardless of brand.

Whether or not the X-T2 can actually attract these dyed-in-the-wool DSLR shooters is of course another matter altogether. Ironically, I get the sense that it is the rangefinder-style X-Pro and X100-series that have attracted more attention among traditional enthusiasts, possibly because they are so un DSLR-like. Fortunately, the X-T2 is an excellent camera. Both ergonomically and in terms of image quality, the X-T2 continues to impress us in studio and real-world testing, and as we’d expect from a product with this kind of lineage, it’s a pleasure to shoot with. I like how the X-Pro2 looks, but I must say, I greatly prefer how the X-T2 handles.

Publicly, Fujifilm is fully committed to its APS-C system, with its twin flagships, but I’d be very surprised if some of the company’s engineers aren’t looking jealously westward to Sweden, where Hasselblad recently announced the X1D. This, after all, is precisely the kind of medium format camera that Fujifilm used to be known for, back in the film days. Lightweight (ish), easy-to-use, and relatively affordable next to more traditional SLRs.

One of the gentlemen I spoke to last week said that ‘in future our goal is to satisfy everyone’. Only he knows exactly what he meant by that, but it’s fun to speculate. What do you think? Let us know in the comments.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Interview: “The best image as fast as possible” – Motorola’s approach to smartphone imaging

11 Jul

Modern smartphones are essentially pocket-sized mini-computers, capable of dealing with many tasks that not very long ago would have been processed on desktop or laptop computers. The camera module is just one component of many, but more and more consumers are carefully considering camera performance in their buying decision.

Manufacturers have been well aware for quite some time and are investing heavily to make sure the cameras on their devices can compete with the best. The device division of mobile communication pioneer Motorola for example, which was taken over by Chinese PC makers Lenovo in 2014, first assembled a dedicated camera and imaging team in 2013 when it was still part of Google.

Since then the brand has launched a number of new devices in its Moto range with a clear focus on imaging performance and features. Most recently the Moto G Plus and the Moto Z and Moto Z Force were the first new models to be officially launched under the Lenovo name. In our first impressions review we were pleasantly surprised by the image output of the mid-range Moto G Plus. Both high-end models, the Moto Z and its sister model Moto Z Force, come with advanced smartphone camera features such as optical image stabilization, on-sensor phase detection autofocus and manual control.

Val Marchevsky and Kathy Mahoney in the Motorola image testing lab Peter Matsimanis

We had a chance to speak to some key members of the Motorola imaging team – Kathy Mahoney, Senior Director of Imaging Experiences at Motorola, Val Marchevsky, Senior Director of Engineering – Head of Camera Team, and Peter Matsimanis, Senior Development Manager Imaging – to find out more about the company’s approach to imaging and camera development. Read on to find out what they had to tell us.


How would you describe Motorola’s strengths and weaknesses in the area of smartphone imaging?

One of our core strengths is our dedicated camera and imaging team. Motorola has rapidly enhanced our imaging expertise over the past few years thanks to our internal team which has grown to include software and hardware engineers with diverse backgrounds (color science, optics, computer vision and beyond), in addition to external camera/imaging veterans. This team has reimagined the company’s approach and attitude toward camera technologies, ultimately delivering some of Motorola’s best imaging solutions to date, including our very own intellectual property, like Temporal Frame Stacking and PDAF (phase detect autofocus), which continues to drive major improvements and stands out within the industry.

As for a weakness, I’d say not forming this non-traditional team sooner! Since building our team in 2013, we’ve re-emerged as an industry leader and key player. A lot has changed – for the better – and we look forward to continuing to create industry leading technology that delivers on consumers’ demands for more affordable, thinner smartphones and faster, higher quality cameras. 

Is there any knowledge exchange happening between the imaging team at Lenovo/Motorola and the manufacturers of “traditional” cameras?

In recent years, we’ve added top imaging talent to our team from traditional camera manufacturers like Kodak and HP. We also work closely with suppliers that have great knowledge of traditional cameras, as well as being ODMs for those traditional camera manufacturers. We have also been able to transfer a significant number of top engineering talent from within Motorola to our imaging team, in order to capitalize on their system integration expertise and to also provide cutting edge solutions to enhance the user experience.

Leveraging 80+ years of embedded systems development, we’ve designed cameras that are truly best-in-class. Our plan for the future is to create common imaging experiences across all our products that will universally delight consumers around the world.

What are consumers most looking for in terms of image quality and how is Motorola currently meeting these needs and/or innovating behind them for the future?

Consumers are looking for great image quality in all conditions – low light, bright light, landscapes, selfies, sporting events and more. At Motorola, we’re constantly evaluating imaging solutions to identify those that will deliver under all of these conditions and ultimately provide consumers with a higher quality experience that enhances the memories captured with their smartphone cameras. This includes improving image detail, color accuracy and white balance for all of our devices.

What camera and imaging features are most important to consumers? And how is Motorola working to improve these features in future devices?

We feel what consumers are looking for and what’s important to them go hand-in-hand. Ultimately, what most people really want – and deserve – is a camera that automatically delivers amazing photos and videos that capture the full essence of their experience. We’re focused on continuing to develop enhanced hardware and intelligent algorithms that deliver unbelievable quality and simplicity, but also enable creative freedom.

In which areas can we expect smartphone cameras to make the biggest improvements in the short and long term?

In the short term, we’ll see strides towards improved performance to deliver bright, detail-rich, noise-free photos and videos in low light environments. Many smartphones on the market take low light pictures that are bright, but lack detail due to over-cleaning. We know that to achieve high-quality low light performance, you need to capture more light with bigger pixels and faster apertures. We see this trend continuing. We also expect to see this capability across all price tiers, and we feel Moto G Plus is paving the way.

In the longer term, at Motorola, we continue to address areas of concern for hardware with lasers, better lenses and lower megapixels with large pixels to enhance low light image quality. We also continue to hone in on smart camera experiences, utilizing computer vision and artificial intelligence to provide users the best image, as fast as possible.

Intelligent software not only maximizes the capabilities of hardware, but also leverages the depth of information available from the device. By using device sensors to detect the environment (light, motion, location, etc.), the software is able to deliver better quality images and richer experiences. It turns your camera into an access point for instant information that can help quickly analyze and identify your surroundings.

The Moto 4G offers impressive camera specs for a mid-range device, including a 1/2.4″ sensor and an AF system that uses both on-chip phase detection and a laser to measure subject distance.

The Moto G Plus is, in most respects, a mid-range device, but comes with a high-end camera specification. What was the decision process behind this design and specification?

Consumers depend on great imaging performance each and every day for all of their communication needs, and it was a priority for us when designing Moto G Plus to offer excellent camera systems. Moto G Plus has a 16MP camera, fast apertures, laser and PDAF focus technologies and a wide-angle front camera lens, rivaling some of the best premium smartphone cameras on the market. Putting this technology in the hands of a diverse global consumer audience is a unique opportunity, and we find it particularly rewarding to help them capture life’s most important moments.

The Moto G Plus comes with three focus methods: contrast detect, phase detection and laser. How difficult is it to combine those and what are the benefits of this combination? 

Moto G Plus has an extremely responsive focus system that delivers crystal-clear photography under all conditions; low light to bright light, subjects close-by and distant landscapes. To do this effectively requires multiple focus technologies and the real-time intelligence to know which is best for current conditions. Picking just one or two is simply not good enough. Our philosophy is to maximize output from each focus system and use modern computational methods to calculate the ideal lens position.

Phase Detect Autofocus does a great job quickly finding focus in bright light settings and when the object of interest is farther away, like in landscapes and at sporting events. Laser focus, sometimes referred to as “time-of-flight,” picks up in low light environments and when subjects are close-by, like restaurants and nightclubs. Contrast focus augments each of these technologies to ensure precise focus across a range of light and subjects.

Getting all three to work synergistically is not an easy task, which is why most competitors pick either PDAF or laser (not both), and then augment with contrast. We believe every picture can and should be the best it can, which is why we’ve included all three technologies in Moto G Plus. We’ve also invested in a tremendous amount of simulation tools, deep learning and advanced statistic engines to ensure Moto G Plus covers the endless range of photos and videos consumers want to capture. We will continue to drive advancements in these multi-focus technologies to advance the speed and accuracy of Moto smartphone cameras going forward.

Are manual camera controls, like the Professional mode on Moto G Plus, a niche feature or something that more users will be expecting in a device in the future?

Consumer needs are extremely diverse, especially on a global scale. Most people simply want a great camera – just point and shoot in any condition, but there are others who are more avid photographers and want more out of their mobile imaging experience. We’ve heard from this particular group of photographic aficionados through blogs, the Google Play store, and even directly, that they want features like the professional mode on Moto G Plus that provides greater control and options to create a specific look without a point-and-shoot or DSLR. We’re making great progress towards addressing even more of these needs, and are providing a wider variety of options for more amateur photographers as well to capture every moment exactly how they want to capture it.

The latest generation of Moto devices, including the Moto Z pictured above and the Moto G Plus, all feature manual control over essential shooting parameters, such as shutter speed, ISO and white balance.

Kathy, you have many years of experience at digital imaging pioneers Kodak. How have you leveraged your past experience in your current role at Motorola?

Kathy: I was fortunate enough to be a part of the start of digital imaging with Kodak, working alongside many talented and intelligent imaging engineers. That experience gave me a solid foundation of understanding around what it takes to deliver truly high-quality imaging systems.

Fundamentally, delivering great imaging is so much more than ‘counting megapixels.’ Cameras are complex and require many technologies to deliver great photography. For example, strong low-light performance demands systems that can capture more light, including big pixels and fast apertures, while attaining fast accurate focus requires multiple focus technologies and the smarts to know which one to use under the current conditions.

My past experiences also helped me realize how important photography really is to consumers’ daily lives, as well as the impact (and consequences) of poor quality. Imaging is how we communicate, relive and memorize our life experiences. I am passionate about ensuring Motorola’s camera technology continues to deliver amazing experiences that consumers can count on to be there when they need it.

What lessons have you learned throughout your career in imaging and photography? What words of wisdom would you give to someone just starting in the field?

Kathy: Throughout my career I have learned how important it is to follow your dreams and choose opportunities that you are passionate about. With passion, you’ll always achieve incredible results. Having worked on some of the first commercial digital cameras, the first photo kiosk, digital minilabs, thermal printers, retail printing systems and online photo services, I have spent my career helping people capture, share and relive their lives.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Macro Maven: An Interview with Ithalu Dominguez

30 Jun

Whenever we scroll up on an Instagram from @itha_mar, we *marvel* at her amazing knack for snapping super close-up macros, of Mother Nature’s handy work.

She’s no professional with a fancy bunch of gear, and specially trained bugs that stay extra still.

Ithalu shoots mostly with her phone. A phone! Just like that one you’ve got right there.

So, we caught up with her to find out all her secrets (in hopes of mastering bug-ography ourselves).

(…)
Read the rest of Macro Maven: An Interview with Ithalu Dominguez (745 words)


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Mirrorless is ‘probably’ the future: an interview with Hasselblad Product Manager Ove Bengtson

27 Jun

It is quite extraordinary for Hasselblad to produce a mirrorless camera like the X1D for a number of reasons. Firstly is the obvious: it has predominantly produced cameras with very large mirrors since its first consumer camera in 1948 – the 1600F. Second, mirrorless cameras with touch screens and electronic view finders are very modern, and we may not all think of Hasselblad as a manufacturer of entirely up-to-date electronic products.

In the X1D we are looking at a medium-format sensor in a body that can hide behind a standard high-enthusiast 35mm-style DSLR. Okay, so plenty of people will point out that it isn’t ‘full frame’ 645 (the smallest of the 120 film formats), but it’s very similar to 127 film which was considered medium format by the ISO organization. More to the point, it’s much bigger than the ‘full frame’ 35mm format and is essentially the same size as the sensors used in Leica’s S series, the Pentax 645Z, Phase One IQ3 50MP and Hasselblad’s own H6D-50c.

I guess this kind of breakthrough is one we’d expect to come from what we might consider a high-tech company, not a business that has traditionally created a relatively low volume of very high-priced and principally mechanical professional tools.

Of course Hasselblad marked a technological turn around when it introduced the H6D with its new electronic platform, but this new X series camera takes what the H6D did a few steps further. Shortly after the announcement of the X1D in Gothenburg I got some time with Hasselblad product manager Ove Bengtson to discuss some of the technical challenges that had to be overcome to create the X1D and to find out some more detail about how the product will work when it comes to market.

‘…designing a mirrorless system is relatively easy compared to our usual H cameras’

‘The X1D took only between 18 and 20 months to develop from the final concept to where we are today,’ says Ove Bengtson. ‘As it uses the same 50-million-pixel Sony IMX161 sensor, the same electronic platform and same processor as the H6D-50c most of the work was already done – designing a mirrorless system is relatively easy compared to our usual H cameras as there are no moving parts. We started discussing the idea in November 2013 but were still talking about it a year later before we decided to go ahead. The work that we had already done in the development of the H6D saved us a lot of time in research for the X1D.’

As mirrorless cameras are so much easier to make and offer so much more flexibility I wonder if mirrorless is the future for Hasselblad. ‘Yes, it probably is, but not for a while. Mirrorless systems can be smaller and lighter, and because they have no internal movement they are more durable and they create less vibration so there is less to disturb image quality. Electronic viewfinders will need to get better though and the AF systems will need to improve to catch up with phase detection systems.’ 

‘We really do want phase detection but we’ll have to wait for the sensor manufacturer.’

‘It is a great benefit to be able to have AF points all over the screen, as in our H system we are really restricted to the centre of the frame, but phase detection wasn’t even an option for the X1D. We discussed having phase detection AF points built into the sensor, but Sony was already too far down the road with the sensor development at that stage. We really do want phase detection but we’ll have to wait for the sensor manufacturer.

So, while mirrorless has many advantages over mirrored systems there are still just as many reasons to use the H system. The H system has better AF in low light, and a lot of photographers prefer an optical viewfinder. The H system is also modular so you can change the backs and use a waistlevel viewfinder – not to mention a choice of 12 lenses including technical lenses – so it is still a very different experience.’

To allow X1D users access to the existing range of H system lenses Hasselblad will introduce what it describes as a ‘simple adapter’, but in the announcement there wasn’t much more detail than that. ‘Yes, this adapter will allow autofocus to operate with most of the H lenses, but they weren’t designed to work with contrast detection systems. Consequently users will need to update the firmware in their lenses to allow them to work properly. Not all lenses have firmware that can be upgraded as early H lenses in 2002 were fixed, but all more recent lenses will be able to be used.’

‘It is still early days for this camera but when it comes to market it will have touch AF…’

The cameras on display at the announcement event had touch screen controls for working the menus and for making feature selections, but they didn’t allow touch AF controls. ‘It is still early days for this camera but when it comes to market it will have touch AF and the AF points will be spread across the screen. You will press the AF/MF button and an AF point display will appear on the screen and then you can select the point you want to use.’

The X1D’s touch-driven interface. The menu screens and displays are controlled via a series of swiping motions, much as we are used to in smartphones.

Ove said that the company hadn’t directly considered allowing the rear screen to be used as a touch pad while the EVF is in use, but that it would probably be a question of firmware and that they would consider it. ‘The touch experience for the user has been a major consideration for us, and we want the touch sensitivity to be the best there is. Users will all have smart phones and we couldn’t allow the screen of the X1D to present an experience that isn’t as good as people will be used to.’

We also talked about the company’s integration of the Nikon flash system and what the reasons were for not developing a system of their own. ‘We don’t want to have to develop our own flash system, as we’d prefer to concentrate our resources on making cameras and lenses. Any system needs a range of flash units as customers want a choice, so it makes much more sense to work with an existing system that already has that range and choice. When we only had the V system we partnered with Sunpak, and in more recent years we worked with Metz, but Metz discontinued the gun as they didn’t sell enough. Nikon agreed to work with us and we are very happy that they offer excellent flash units that will work well with our X1D.’

‘We have to produce the best that we can and allowing reduced quality just isn’t an option’

The XCD lenses that Hasselblad has developed to go with the X1D use leaf shutters and offer a top shutter speed of 1/2000sec. Leaf shutter systems allow much faster flash synchronization than focal plane shutter systems and, as is the case with the H6D, the X1D can work with full power flash at that shortest shutter opening. ‘In this camera and in the H6D we use a dual shutter system to achieve the top 1/2000sec flash sync speed,’ explains Ove.

‘The new XCD lenses are designed and built to the same specification standards that we use for the H series lenses. We have to produce the best that we can and allowing reduced quality just isn’t an option. In fact these have a short back focus which makes it easier to design them to really excellent standards. The lenses are designed by us and manufactured by Nittoh who have made many great lenses in the past, including the lenses for the X-Pan. These XCD lenses have no crosstalk and the angle of the light as it approaches the sensor is well within the limits. You’ll notice that the exit pupil of the wide angle particularly is set well inside the barrel.’

‘Right now… we have no zooms on the roadmap’

‘To start with we will concentrate on fixed focal length lenses as we can make these small in line with the compact concept of the camera. I expect there will be some demand for zooms but we will wait and see what that demand is and then respond to it. Right now though, we have no zooms on the roadmap. Personally I think they will have to be too big, and I want us to concentrate on the best performance and the highest resolution possible.’

Speaking to Ove and other technicians at the event it is obvious that Hasselblad has built this system around the specific physical dimensions of the 43.8×32.9mm sensor. If there will be a 100MP version of the X camera it will not be one using the current Sony offering that measures 53.4x40mm. ‘The camera isn’t designed to take a larger sensor,’ I was told, ‘and the XCD lenses don’t have the covering circle to work with it. We designed the camera to be small and portable, and a part of that equation is the size of the sensor. If we work with a larger sensor it means we need a bigger body and bigger lenses, and that would defeat the principles of what the X1D is about.’

No one would be drawn on how many lenses the company expects to have in the XDC range in five years’ time, but it is clear there will be more and that they will start coming shortly. The 30mm will be formally announced at Photokina and I think it reasonable to assume there will be hints of other focal lengths at the time, even if the announcements aren’t formal.

The X1D really does mark quite a departure for Hasselblad and a step towards a larger market (though still some way from the mass market) that will allow the company to broaden its user base. The step too though is as much about demonstrating it is a modern company now that can make modern products. It has also drawn an unmistakable line under that period of its life when it rebadged and allowed other brands to have too much of a hand in its manufacturing.

Things are looking up; Hasselblad seems to be back on track, innovating once more and in many ways getting ahead of the game. The X1D is certainly the coolest, most flexible, portable and accessible digital medium format almost on the market.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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CP+ 2016: Nikon interview – ‘the D500 is the D300S replacement that customers wanted’

28 Mar

DPReview was in Yokohma, Japan last month for the annual CP+ photography show. As well as reporting from the show floor, and getting our hands on the latest cameras and lenses, we also made time to sit down with senior executives from several of the major manufacturers, including Nikon. We spoke to Nikon about the company’s new DL-series compact cameras, the D500 and D5 and the future of the 1 System. 


Let’s start with the new DL series. Why did you choose to make three cameras?

We wanted to satisfy most of our customers, all at once. And with this DL concept we wanted DL users – who we believe will be DSLR users – to choose whichever camera in this DL series as if they were choosing an interchangeable lens. And the second aim is reflected in the cameras’ naming. DL. ‘D’ means ‘Digital Camera’ and ‘L’ means ‘Lens’. Again, we want consumers to choose these cameras as if they were choosing from interchangeable lenses, and this is why we named them 18-50, 24-85 and 24-500. 

Nikon intends buyers of its new DL-series compact cameras to shop for the right camera as they might a lens. That’s the logic behind the new cameras’ naming. DL18-50 (shown here), DL24-85 and DL24-500. The numbers correspond to the effective focal lengths covered by the cameras’ lenses. 

With the ability to choose these three different cameras with their three different lenses, how is the DL series differentiated from the 1-series, or from Coolpix?

Our target with the DL series is high-end users who would use Nikon DSLRs. So the series has to be suitable for DSLR users who want a premium compact camera. Coolpix is for the mass consumer, it’s very easy to use in terms of operation. But the DL series in terms of operability and the variety of lenses is much closer to a single lens reflex camera. This makes it different to other compact cameras such as Coolpix.

As for the value that the DL series provides, it is different from DSLR cameras, although the customer may be the same. The value that is provided is different in the sense that the focal length of – say – 24-500mm doesn’t exist in DSLR. A wide range all the way from wideangle to super telephoto. These things are unique to the DL series. 

Can we expect to see much further development of lenses for the 1-series, or is your focus on DL?

We will continue to watch the needs of our customers and market trends to decide what new products will be appropriate – we cannot reveal future plans yet.

How important is pricing in this market segment, and who is your most important competitor?

We acknowledge that the premium compact camera market is very ‘hot’ right now. There are a lot of competitors. But all of these competitors, although they’re all in the same market, their aims are very different. For example some of our competitors want to provide high-performance cameras with the aim of ease of use. Ours is not like that. Our aim for the DL series is for our users to use the cameras as much as they like, and to enjoy shooting with them.

The ‘bridge’ style DL24-500 is the largest camera of the three, and the only one to offer an electronic viewfinder. The larger form factor allows it to pack in by far the most ambitious zoom lens of its sister models.

Are the target audience of the DL series and 1-series different?

Nikon 1 cameras are system cameras so you can customize the cameras as you like depending on the shooting situation. The strength of Nikon 1 is the super telephoto that you can use for example, at 800mm equivalent. And another benefit is interchangeable lenses, so you can switch from long lenses to shot lenses, so system adaptation is one of the strengths of Nikon 1. 

But for DL we can provide all the way from very wide to super telephoto with good portability. 

One of the things that we like about the 1 series it that the performance of the cameras’ hybrid autofocus is very good. Can we expect the same performance from the DL line?

Yes. 

Will we see a professional level mirrorless camera from Nikon?

We are willing to cater to the needs of customers by developing what is required by the market. We’re observing market trends very carefully, and while the DLSR market is in decline, we observe that the mirrorless market is not declining in the same way, so we’ll continue to watch the trends and cater to whatever needs we hear from our customers.

Do you see the DL series co-existing with Coolpix cameras in the future?

Yes. Coolpix will continue to be developed. We recently announced four new Coolpix cameras.

Is the D500 intended to be a replacement model to the D300S?

Yes it is. It’s a DX flagship after 7 years of the D300S in the market. 

The D300S was on the market for seven years, before finally being replaced this year by the D500. But not before Nikon tried to replace it with the D7000-series. It was (we’re told) only the consistent demands from high-end APS-C fans that lead to a true replacement for the still-popular D300S. 

Nikon now has truly modern solutions for professional users in the DX and FX formats, how would you characterize those two types of customers?

D5 is our flagship camera and we believe that professional sports photographers that have enjoyed using the D3 and D4-series series will enjoy the D5. With the D500 the user can enjoy some of the high-end functions used in the D5, such as its AF system. But they can also enjoy the agility of the [smaller] size so we hope that not only professionals but also advanced amateurs will enjoy the D500.

Was the D7000-series ever meant to replace the D300-series?

We were hoping that the D7000 series would cover a portion of the customer base that used the D300S, but the customers continued to say that they wanted a replacement for that model, so that’s why we made the D500.

Now that the D500 has been launched, will we see continued development of professional DX-format lenses?

Yes we have plans for more lenses, if necessary after analyzing the needs of the market. 

The D500 and D5 represent flagship cameras in Nikon’s APS-C and full-frame lineups, respectively. A lot of core functionality is shared between the two cameras, including the same highly advanced autofocus system. 

Why did you select 20MP for both cameras?

We believe that 20MP is the best resolution when it comes to balancing image quality and handling – i.e. speed – which professional sports photographers value most. Also we’ve had 12 and 16MP models, and some users wanted more, so we think that 20MP is the minimum to achieve this balance. 20MP is the best resolution at this point in time. In the future if we can increase speed and increase resolution, we may choose a different resolution. But right now 20MP represents the best balance. 

It’s good to hear that Nikon is continuing to develop the DX lineup. Do you believe that D500 will mostly be using the camera with DX, or FX lenses?

If we were to make a recommendation on the basis of [versatility], we’d recommend a DX lens with the D500, because it’s a DX camera. 

When you develop professional products like these, how does your process differ compared to developing non-pro cameras?

Our question is how do we cater to the users’ needs? One example is memory card slots. If we’re designing a camera for a professional, we’ll include two card slots for identical types of cards. For higher-level amateurs like D500 owners, we’ll include two different card slots, one SD, and one XQD. It’s different user needs.

What was the thinking behind making two versions of the D5, one with CF and one with XQD?

the highest priority for card slots in the D5 is to provide two slots of the same type. CF or XQD. We chose XQD for the D5 because it can support the highest performance that the camera is capable of [in stills and video modes]. We added a model that uses CF cards because users of the D3 and D4 series are familiar with these cards, and have them already. The response has been good to both variants. 

Given how responsive the D5’s AF system is in terms of subject tracking, do you think that DSLRs will always have an advantage in this respect, compared to mirrorless?

Yes. We believe that there is an AF advantage, especially when it comes to tracking moving subjects at high speed. 

Here’s a simulated image of the D5’s AF array, placed over a representation of the ‘scene’ as it would be recognized by any one color channel of the camera’s 180,000-pixel RGB metering sensor. This sensor works in concert with the AF system to recognize and track subjects across the frame and in depth. Our initial impressions are that it works exceptionally well. 

We understand that the color filter array on the D5 sensor has been changed to improve low light performance. Can you comment on this?

It’s very difficult to explain exactly how we achieved this, but the basic concept is that we improved light-gathering ability. And by doing that we reduced noise and increased sensitivity. 

AF precision is becoming increasingly crucial in high-resolution DSLRs. We’ve seen various solutions, from AF fine tuning to manufacturers like Sigma and Tamron making ‘docks’ to program their lenses. How should this problem be solved?

The D810 has 36MP and the D5 has 20MP. Autofocus precision is at the same level. We’ve had an autofocus fine-tuning system for some time, because although autofocus precision has improved, some photographers want to precisely control autofocus for their specific needs. The struggle for users is in using this system, through trial and error.

We introduced automatic adjustment [in the D500 and D5] to make the process easier for them. We expect that now, some of our customers who previously thought that AF adjustment was a hassle in the past and didn’t do it, will start to use automatic adjustment, and will come to us with additional requirements. We will proactively reflect this [feedback] in our future development. 


Editors’ notes

Rishi Sanyal and Barney Britton

The reason we didn’t identify specific interlocutors in this interview is that Nikon sent about 20 people to speak to us in Yokohama (only some of whom are pictured above), plus an interpreter. While we suspect that – as usual – the comments beneath this interview will be packed with people criticizing us for not asking harder questions, and Nikon for not really answering some of the ones that we did ask, Nikon takes us – and you – very seriously. The gentlemen we spoke to didn’t quite say it, but let’s be honest – the D500 is a camera for DPReview readers. All those who complained for years that the D300S didn’t have a proper replacement can take pleasure in the fact that it was your complaints that lead directly to the creation of the D500, a level above the D7000-series that was, we learned, intended to replace the D300S.

And what a replacement the D500 has turned out to be. Our main worry about Nikon’s high-end APS-C DSLR lineup isn’t actually about the cameras at all, but lenses. It was good to hear a kind-of, sort-of acknowledgement that some new high-end DX-format lenses are on the way. Maybe at Photokina this September?

Speaking of lenses, it was interesting to hear Nikon executives speak about the new DL lineup (which is definitively not related to Coolpix, no way, no sir), which has been designed around the concept of ‘camera as lens’, offering (effectively) three different focal lengths built around the same 20MP 1-inch sensor, at fairly accessible price points. If what we’ve been told about AF performance proves true (and it should be) the DL compacts might offer among the best autofocus of any camera currently in this market segment. We’re very excited by the DL18-50 and DL24-85 in particular. Finally, along with Canon’s PowerShot G7 X Mark II and Panasonic’s ZS100, Sony’s Cyber-shot RX-series has some real competition.

Speaking of autofocus, Nikon 1 was arguably one of the first mirrorless series to portend the convergence of on- and off-sensor phase-detect AF performance. There are still differences, though, and we asked Nikon if it thought there would always be an advantage to DSLR when it came to subject tracking during bursts. Subject tracking, or the ability of a camera to follow a subject around the frame, is increasingly becoming so good in some cameras as to warrant relinquishing control over your exact AF point to the camera – which in some cases can be far better than any human at switching AF points to stick to your subject. The D5/D500 in particular are industry leading at this. Although mirrorless cameras have the ability to subject track very well – they constantly assess the scene with their image sensor, after all – we’ve tended to note a drop in performance during bursts. We wondered how much this had to do with the dual-purposing of the image sensor in mirrorless cameras both for AF tracking and image recording. DSLRs are approaching the subject tracking problem by essentially incorporating an additional image (RGB metering) sensor into the light path to the optical finder, and dedicating it to subject analysis and tracking (and face detection).

Nikon’s response was that there is still an advantage to this separate sensor approach, and we largely agree – for now. Given the relatively low resolution of these metering sensors and the fast readouts possible due to the relatively low pixel count, as well as the incredibly short mirror blackouts of cameras like the D5/D500, it may be that a secondary sensor for subject tracking will remain an advantage for high-end DSLRs for years to come.

But we do wonder whether efforts at increasing the readout speeds of main imaging sensors (the ones that produce our photographs) – perhaps to the point where there is no blackout during shooting at all – might allow mirrorless designs to catch up to, or exceed, DSLR performance in this regard.

And if they do, there will be one less thing to worry about: AF calibration and adjustment. We asked Nikon whether we could ever expect its new automatic AF fine-tuning solution to take into account multiple focus points, focal lengths, and subject distances. Every time we mention this sort of a solution to anyone, there’s typically a chuckle in the room – I think a nervous one, acknowledging the complexity of such a solution.

And it is complex. The optimal Fine Tune (or microadjustment) value can vary from AF point to AF point, and with lens focal length and subject distance. Not to mention aperture as well, when there’s substantial focus shift. Camera and lens firmware already contains complicated tables dedicated to such adjustments – it’s just that there’s no guarantee they’re right for your particular lens + body combination. Automating the creation of a matrix to correct for all the variables that lead to inaccurate focus would be welcome, but at what point does it make more sense to ditch the DSLR approach altogether and proceed with a mirrorless platform that is less susceptible to these issues in the first place? 

As usual for the on-record portions of an interview of this kind (i.e., the portion that you just finished reading) the most interesting insights can be found between the lines. The line that interests us most came up as we discussed Nikon’s mirrorless strategy. It is notable that in their response, Nikon’s executives noted on-record the decline in the DSLR industry relative to the more buoyant mirrorless market. It seems pretty much inevitable at this point that Nikon will make a more serious move into mirrorless, and my money would be on that happening relatively soon, possibly even this year. Two things seem pretty certain – whatever product eventually emerges, it won’t be a member of the 1-series, and it certainly won’t be a Coolpix.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Photographic Education, Specialties, and Business: Interview with Photographer Melanie Weij

18 Mar

In one of our recent newsletters, I asked our subscribers to share their stories with me. The newsletter celebrated the beginning of spring and was dedicated to inspiration and aspiration in the contemporary photographic world. I always encourage readers to hit the reply button and get involved in the conversation. And often, you do (high five!). So did our subscriber, Continue Reading

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