RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Mark’

Canon G1 X Mark II First Impressions Review

17 Apr

CanonG1XII.jpg

Canon’s PowerShot G1 X Mark II is an intriguing update. It keeps the 1.5″-type sensor from its predecessor, but adds a faster processor, longer and brighter lens, tilting LCD, dual control rings and has Wi-Fi with NFC. The big change for 2014 is no more optical viewfinder. Our first impressions review covers the usual aspects of the camera (Controls, Body and Design, etc.), but also has our Shooting Experience report where we talk about it handles in the real-world. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Canon G1 X Mark II First Impressions Review

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Mary Ellen Mark to receive Sony World Photography award

14 Apr

MEM_3.jpg

The World Photography Organization has announced that American photographer Mary Ellen Mark is the recipient of the 2014 Sony World Photography Awards for Outstanding Contribution to Photography. She has published eighteen books, with her nineteenth available this spring. Mark is known for becoming deeply ingrained in the lives of her subjects, providing a unique view of their lives without making those on the edges of society look inhuman. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Mary Ellen Mark to receive Sony World Photography award

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Canon PowerShot G1X Mark II real-world gallery

08 Apr

IMG_0101.jpg

Now that we have our hands on not one, but two PowerShot G1 X Mark IIs, we’ve running around out taking photos like crazy. This first installment of 22 photos – some of which may look familiar – should give you a taste of what the camera can do, and there are plenty of additional samples on the way. See gallery

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Canon PowerShot G1X Mark II real-world gallery

Posted in Uncategorized

 

CP+ 2014: Hands-on with Canon PowerShot G1 X Mark II

13 Feb

g1xii_3.jpg

We’re at the CP+ show in Yokohama, Japan where Canon is showing off its latest high-end compact camera, the PowerShot G1 X Mark II. The G1 X Mark II replaces the original G1 X, which was announced two years ago and offers several improvements over the older model including a faster 24-120mm equivalent F2.0-3.9 lens and a closer minimum focus distance. The G1 X Mark II is built around a 1.5 inch 12.8MP CMOS sensor and can be used with an (optional) electronic viewfinder. Click through for a hands-on look.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on CP+ 2014: Hands-on with Canon PowerShot G1 X Mark II

Posted in Uncategorized

 

A quick look at the Canon PowerShot G1 X Mark II

12 Feb

g1x-ii.png

One of the most exciting cameras released today is Canon’s PowerShot G1 X Mark II, which retains the 1.5-inch-type sensor from its predecessor and adds a faster processor, longer and brighter lens, tilting LCD, dual control rings, and much more. We’ve put together a short article that covers the most interesting new features on the G1 X II. Have a look.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on A quick look at the Canon PowerShot G1 X Mark II

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Canon PowerShot G1 X Mark II adds faster lens and AF to big-sensor body

12 Feb

HR_G1X_MARKII_BLACK_3Q_CL.png

Canon has announced the long-awaited follow-up to its PowerShot G1 X large-sensor compact: the G1 X Mark II. The G1 X II improves upon its predecessor in many ways. It’s smaller, features a faster 24-120mm equivalent F2.0-3.9 lens (with closer focusing distances), a 31-point AF system, dual lens rings, a touchscreen LCD that can tilt upward by 180°, and Wi-Fi with NFC. One added trick is that the G1 X II can shoot at 3:2 or 4:3 with the same field-of-view. The catch? No more optical viewfinder (though an EVF is optional). It will be available in April for $ 799.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Canon PowerShot G1 X Mark II adds faster lens and AF to big-sensor body

Posted in Uncategorized

 

A quick look at the Canon PowerShot G1 X Mark II

12 Feb

g1x-ii.png

One of the most exciting cameras released today is Canon’s PowerShot G1 X Mark II, which retains the 1.5-inch-type sensor from its predecessor and adds a faster processor, longer and brighter lens, tilting LCD, dual control rings, and much more. We’ve put together a short article that covers the most interesting new features on the G1 X II. Have a look.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on A quick look at the Canon PowerShot G1 X Mark II

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Review

03 Nov

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Review.jpg

Welcome to Mark II of the Sony Cyber-Shot RX100, a neat, surprising camera that could sit happily alongside an upper level snapper (like a DSLR) in the camera bag. Unsurprisingly, it is priced at the upper level of compact digicams.

It has a reasonably fast Carl Zeiss f1.8, 3.6x optical zoom, imaging to a 20.2 million pixel CMOS, enabling the capture of a maximum image size of 5472×3080, leading to a 46x26cm print.

Video can be captured in AVHCD or MPEG4, up to a Full HD 1920×1080 pixel resolution.

Yes, you can shoot still shots in the middle of a video recording but with a click or two on the audio.

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II review back.jpg

The body is made from aluminium and has a tiltable (up/down) LCD screen that responds to touch commands as well as tilting up by 84 degrees and down by 45 degrees. There is a (pricey) turret viewfinder to allow clear viewing in bright light that fits into the camera’s hot shoe; this shoe also accepts a clip on LCD screen, external flash or a microphone adaptor.

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Review top.jpg

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Features

The camera control layout follows the usual Sony pattern: at extreme left is the flash cell; centre of the top surface is the multi interface shoe (or ‘hot shoe’); to the right is the power button, zoom lever and shutter button; nearby is the mode dial with positions for intelligent and superior auto exposure (!), PASM, movie, memory recall, sweep panorama and scene selection (presets for portrait, sports, macro, fireworks etc).

Function button.jpg

Rear: the familiar movie record button is on the top right corner; beneath it is a really useful Function button that offers exposure correction, ISO setting, AWB, the D-RANGE Optimiser and access to a wide range of effects … such as posterisation, pop colour, partial colour, retro, toy camera effect (in colorisations such as cool, warm, green, magenta). You could spend days with this item!

The D-Range Optimiser shoots a bracket of three shots with different exposures; the camera then overlays the bright area s of the under exposed image and the dark areas of the over exposed image to create an image with improved gradation. A single image with the ideal range is saved.

Menu 1.jpg

Menu 2.jpg

Nearby is the menu button which displays a super wide range of options. Newbies should pay deep attention to this menu … it all happens here! If you find a specific function is not working properly, it’s most likely because a ‘box’ in the menu has not been ticked!

Lower is the control wheel. Here you can select options for flash, self timer, burst shooting and exposure compensation. If your camera happens to be set to auto or intelligent auto you can access a range of picture effects, change image brightness, colour etc.

The central button of the control wheel locks in tracking focus to the subject nearest centre frame.

Lower still is the replay button and one which doubles as the image trash action and gives access to a useful information bank. I guess the latter gives the game away with the RX100: it is really a high priced beginners’ camera! Oh well!

Sweep panorama.jpg

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Pano 1.JPG

Sony, IMHO, has by far the best sweep panorama feature of all compact digicams: you can pan right, left, up or down and capture panos in enormous sizes. Like: 12,416×1856 pixels!

NFC

This is also Sony’s first NFC camera. Wassat?

Near Field Communication is designed to enable users to instantly share images with other NFC capable devices, such as Android smartphones, tablets, laptops or even TV.

The company’s strategy behind NFC is to simplify the connection of its RX100 II to smart devices. Once connected, users can remotely control the camera’s shutter release from the mobile device, quickly receive the captured image via WiFi and upload the transferred images straightaway to a social networking site.

But is NFC just Bluetooth or Wifi? Maybe.

Take a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near_field_communication for more info.

Snoopy 2.JPG

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Review Yacht.jpg

Distortion

No problems at either end of the zoom. A well corrected lens.

Startup

In just a little over two seconds the camera came to life after the power was tapped. Then I was able to fire off a run of shots as fast as I could tap the button.

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Review ISO Tests

Sony Cybershot RX100 Mark II ISO 100.JPG

Sony Cybershot RX100 Mark II ISO 400.JPG

Sony Cybershot RX100 Mark II ISO 800.JPG

Sony Cybershot RX100 Mark II ISO 1600.JPG

Sony Cybershot RX100 Mark II ISO 3200.JPG

Sony Cybershot RX100 Mark II ISO 6400.JPG

Sony Cybershot RX100 Mark II ISO 12800.JPG

At ISO 1600 sharpness dropped off slightly but noise was low. By ISO 6400 these factors were a little worse. By ISO 12800 sharpness was down further and noise up — but not by a large factor.

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Review Verdict

Quality: just above average.
Why you would buy the Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II: compact; fast Zeiss lens.
Why you wouldn’t buy the Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II: limited zoom range for your needs; LCD screen tilts are limited.

A surprising package in such a tiny body.

User guide.jpg

I felt the manuals to be inadequate: aside from a 37 page PDF basic guide in English and a Web-based user guide with no search facility, that was all. For a camera at this price level you could at least expect at least a decent searchable PDF manual.

Otherwise, a very good performance.

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Specifications

Image Sensor: 20.2 million effective pixels.
Metering: Multi pattern, centre-weighted, spot.
Exposure Modes: Auto, Program AE, shutter and aperture priority, manual.
Sensor Size: 13.2×8.8mm Exmor R CMOS.
Lens: Carl Zeiss Vario Sonnar T* f1.8-4.9/10.4-37.1mm (28-100mm as 35 SLR equivalent).
Shutter Speed: 30 to 1/2000 second.
Continuous Shooting: 2.5, 10 fps.
Memory: Memory Stick Duo, PRO Duo/PRO-HG Duo/SD/SDHC/SDXC and Micro SD/SDHC cards.
Image Sizes (pixels): 5472×3080 to 2592×1944.
Movies (pixels): 1920×1080, 1440×1080, 640×480.
LCD Screen: 7.6cm LCD (1,229,000 pixels).
Colour Space: sRGB, Adobe RGB.
File Formats: JPEG, RAW, JPEG+RAW, AVCHD, MPEG4.
ISO Sensitivity: Auto, 160 to 25600.
Interface: USB 2.0, micro HDMI, WiFi, DC, remote.
Power: Rechargeable lithium ion battery, DC input.
Dimensions: 102x58x38 WHDmm.
Weight: 281 g (with battery and card).
Price: get your hands on a Sony DSC-RX100M II Cyber-shot at Amazon here.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Review

The post Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Review by Barrie Smith appeared first on Digital Photography School.


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 Mark II Review

Posted in Photography

 

Canon updates firmware for EOS 5D Mark III

31 Oct

HR_5D_MARKIII_EF24-70_3Q_CL.png

Canon has released firmware version 1.2.3 for the EOS 5D Mark III, which fixes four bugs (including one in which the flash may not fire when the shutter is pressed) and adds the ability to adjust LCD brightness when an HDMI cable is connected. For the full list of fixes – and a link to the update – follow the link.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Canon updates firmware for EOS 5D Mark III

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Getting Aerial: Mark di Suvero at Crissy Field

16 Sep

I’ve been tinkering with aerial photography and videography since NAB in April. Unfortunately where I live the wind can make the experience risky. Still this past weekend I decided to brave the America’s cup crowds at Crissy Field and get an alternate view of the Mark di Suvero sculpture exhibit. I look forward to getting a little more air time the next time the winds die down.

 

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Getting Aerial: Mark di Suvero at Crissy Field

The post Getting Aerial: Mark di Suvero at Crissy Field appeared first on JMG-Galleries – Landscape, Nature & Travel Photography.

       

Related Stories

  • Getting Aerial: Mark di Suvero at Crissy Field – Enclosure
  • The Egg Factory – Bisti Bandlands, New Mexico
  • The Egg Factory – Bisti Bandlands, New Mexico – Enclosure
Feed Ads by FeedBlitz
powered by ad choices

 


JMG-Galleries

 
Comments Off on Getting Aerial: Mark di Suvero at Crissy Field

Posted in Equipment