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Posts Tagged ‘Mark’

Canon G7 X Mark III goes to Spain

04 Feb

Jessica Whitaker is a professional photographer and founder of the popular online community Build + Bloom where she teaches photography. Join Jessica and her model Chelsea as they document their trip to the Basque region of Spain, using the Canon PowerShot G7 X Mark III.

Starting in the vibrant city of Bilbao, known for its mix of modern architecture and traditional Basque culture, they drove east along the coast to San-Sebastian, capturing photos and video of the culturally unique region along the way.

See more of Jessica’s work at her website and on Instagram

Canon PowerShot G7 X Mark III in Spain

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Shooting with the Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mark III in Sonoma County

14 Jan

From rolling vineyards to redwoods to ocean views, Sonoma County is a stunning place to photograph. For restaurateur and cyclist Remi McManus, it’s also a much-needed escape from the stresses of his day-to-day work. On a recent trip, he brought along the Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mark III to capture the sights on a ride through the region, getting better acquainted with its beauty (and wines), as well as the scars that remain after the recent wildfires.

Sample images from this video

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Canon releases white papers detailing the still and video tech inside the 1D X Mark III

14 Jan

Editor’s note: Links have been updated and are now linking to the proper white papers once again. It appears Canon changed the URLs, causing a permission error.


Canon has released a pair of white papers on its new 1D X Mark III that dive into the details of the still and video technology inside its latest flagship camera system.

The still and video white papers are 59- and 21-pages long, respectively, and cover nearly every piece of tech inside the 1D X Mark III, complete with accompanying charts, graphics, tables and more. From details on the new square pixel AF detectors and their faster readouts to the Canon Log optoelectronic transfer function used in the video, these white papers cover it all and then some.

One of many charts/illustrations in the video white paper showing the Canon Log OETF for video captured with the 1DX Mark III.

You can find the still image white paper and video white paper on Canon’s 1D X Mark III product page. They’re viewable in the browser or available to download as PDFs.

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The Canon 1D X Mark III Is Officially Announced, With 20 FPS and a New Processor

13 Jan

The post The Canon 1D X Mark III Is Officially Announced, With 20 FPS and a New Processor appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.

 

dps-canon-1dx-mark-iii-announced

Well, it’s finally here:

The Canon 1D X Mark III – the camera that wildlife and sports photographers have been waiting for, and that will rival the upcoming Nikon D6 just in time for the Summer Olympics.

The Canon 1D X line is far out of the price range of most photographers. Yet it still inspires constant discussion. Probably because it shows the peak of 35mm photography and, most importantly, what Canon can do when it really lets loose.

So what does this action photography powerhouse include?

As expected, the Canon 1D X Mark III will feature a new full-frame Canon sensor, though the 20.1 megapixels of resolution is almost identical to that of the 20.2 megapixel Canon 1D X Mark II. This is hopefully a sign that Canon has made great strides in low light performance (and Canon’s website claims that the 1D X Mark II offers “even better high-ISO image quality that the previous version”).

The Canon 1D X Mark II was a top-of-the-line low light performer, which means that the Canon 1D X Mark III has a lot to live up to; if Canon has actually managed to improve low light performance, the 1D X Mark III’s high-ISO capabilities will be truly impressive.

The Canon 1D X Mark III Is Officially Announced, With 20 FPS and a New Processor

Also new in the 1D X Mark III is the processor, Canon’s DIGIC X. With the DIGIC X, you’ll be able to shoot at 16 frames per second using the optical viewfinder and 20 frames per second in Live View. Of course, these speeds are useless without a capable AF system, but Canon promises great strides in that area, too. The 1D X Mark III will feature a 191-point AF system that can “follow subjects across the…AF array like no EOS DSLR before it.” This should certainly please sports photographers, and wildlife photographers, too.

Live View autofocus is an area where Canon has repeatedly managed to stand out, and it looks like the 1D X Mark III should continue this trend. The camera body includes Canon’s famed Dual Pixel AF, with Eye Detect AF and 525 AF zones.

Also included in the Canon 1D X Mark III are dual CFexpress card slots, a 1000 RAW image buffer, a 2850-photo battery life, and impressive video capabilities (UHD 4k video at 60p).

So if you’re a professional sports or wildlife photographer looking for the next flagship camera, or you’re really looking to take your action photography to the next level and you have a limitless budget, then take a look at the Canon 1D X Mark III. The camera will drop in February for $ 6499 USD, and is currently available for preorder.

The post The Canon 1D X Mark III Is Officially Announced, With 20 FPS and a New Processor appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.


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Hands-on with the Canon EOS-1D X Mark III

10 Jan

Hands on with the Canon EOS-1D X Mark III

Although we’ve known it’s been coming for some time, Canon has now released all the details about its new EOS-1D X Mark III. A big, double-grip DSLR, the 1D X Mark III sits at the top of Canon’s lineup as its fastest, toughest and in many ways, most advanced camera yet. You’d be forgiven at first glance for mistaking it for the previous Mark II (or a much older 1D camera), but small refinements on the outside bely some big advances within.

Autofocus, shutter, sensor and processor

Let’s start with some of those big internal advances. First off, the EOS-1D X Mark III has an all-new autofocus system for use with the optical viewfinder. It offers the same coverage as the Mark II, but with 191 points, of which 155 are cross-type. For the first time, this secondary sensor uses conventional square pixels, rather than dedicated ‘strip’ detectors.

The camera will focus through the viewfinder with telephoto-lens-and-teleconverter combinations down to F8. The overall system has been enhanced with machine learning for body and head detection, yet simplified, with fewer customizable autofocus ‘cases’ and a new ‘Case Auto’ mode that automatically adjusts parameters on the fly without any input needed from the user.

The shutter mechanism has been redesigned, with the goal of giving users less blackout while shooting bursts than the previous model, even while shooting at a faster burst speed. It’s still rated to 500k shots, so should be plenty durable. There’s a menu option to enable an electronic front-curtain shutter if you’re concerned about shutter shock, but we haven’t found any sign of this yet in our limited time with the camera.

Though there’s the same ~20MP of resolution we’ve seen before, the sensor has been updated and offers faster readout speeds. So if you want to take advantage of the silent, fully electronic shutter, you’ll find that rolling shutter artifacts are pretty well controlled. The new Digic X processor is many, many times faster than the dual Digic 6+ units in the previous camera. Together, the sensor and processor combine to unlock 20fps burst shooting with AF / AE in live view (16fps through the viewfinder), as well as some pretty impressive video specs…

Video

The EOS-1D X Mark III makes for an excellent (if hefty) hybrid stills-and-video camera. The toggle switch shown here lets users quickly switch between the two mediums, and the camera now remembers your shooting mode and exposure settings as you move back and forth. This is really great for, as an example, a sports shooter freezing motion at 1/1000 sec shutter speed for stills, but then wanting to quickly capture some 4K/24p video, where they’re more likely to want around 1/50 sec shutter speed.

Impressively, the 1D X Mark III can capture Raw, 5.5K/60p video internally. Just be aware that shooting in this mode means you’ll fill up a 128GB card in under six minutes. You can also capture smooth and detailed 4K/60p video with All-I or IPB compression and 4:2:2 10-bit Log capture if needed, though you need to drop to 4K/30p or lower, or engage the ‘Super 35’ crop mode if you want access to the camera’s excellent Dual Pixel AF system while recording.

There are both headphone and microphone jacks for audio, and though there’s no sensor-shift stabilization, you can enable up to two degree of electronic stabilization, with the more modest setting having minimal impact on detail retention.

But perhaps you’ve noticed that the AF-ON button looks a bit different than before…

AF Smart Controller

The AF-ON button can now function as a sort of trackpad for your thumb. Once enabled in the menus, you can drag your thumb across its surface to control the AF point placement in both the optical viewfinder and when using the rear screen in Live View. You can fine-tune the sensitivity, and because it’s based on optical technology, it even works with gloves if you find yourself in chilly conditions.

In our experience on a pre-production camera, we’ve found that it works well, but different users have different sensitivity preferences. And, quite frankly, some of us have had a hard time re-programming our muscle memory to avoid just reaching for the AF joystick by default.

We suspect that, with a little practice, it’ll be one of the standout features that users will remember this camera for in a few year’s time.

Other ergonomic updates

The rest of the rear of the camera is pretty consistent with what we’ve seen before, though Canon has added backlighting to most of the buttons on the rear plate, so it’s easier to work in dim conditions. The touchscreen also has some updated functions; in addition to controlling the autofocus area and interacting with menus, users can now double-tap with two fingers to zoom in on the menu interface for easier reading.

You’ll also see the built-in microphone and speaker in the rear of the camera for leaving voice memos attached to certain files, an invaluable tool for the full-time sports shooter needing to record crucial information about a particular series of images out of many thousands.

Top plate

There’s not much in the way of surprises on the top plate either, though the ‘illumination’ button that lights up the top-plate LCD is also how you light up the rear controls. The information display gives you almost all you need to know about the camera and your settings at a quick glance, and existing EOS-1D users should be able to find their way around without much fuss.

You may notice an outline of a cover plate just in front of the flash hot-shoe. This is the only portion of the exterior chassis that isn’t metal; the camera’s built-in GPS, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth antennas are housed here.

Hello, CFexpress

The 1D X Mark III ditches the previous camera’s mis-matched CFast and CF card slots in favor of two matching CFexpress slots. These cards are fast and very expensive, but it’s the speed of these CFexpress cards that allow the camera to capture that Raw 5.5K video we covered earlier, internally, and they’re also responsible for a near limitless buffer during continuous shooting.

Fun fact: if you set the camera to 16fps and mash the shutter button, you’ll reach the shutter’s 500,000-shot rating in a touch under nine hours.

A familiar battery

Good news for current 1D-series users and photo agencies: The 1D X Mark III uses the same LP-E19 battery as the older model. But this doesn’t mean you don’t get a capacity upgrade. Thanks to more efficient processing throughout, the battery life has leapt from a CIPA rating of 1210 shots with the viewfinder on the Mark II to a whopping 2850 shots on the Mark III. Likewise, Live View shooting climbs from 260 shots to 610. As always, users are likely to get many more shots per charge in real world shooting.

Ports and networking

Lastly, what sort of sports camera would this be without an ethernet port? Yes, the EOS-1D X Mark III supports gigabit ethernet connections, and is being released alongside a new, professional WFT-E9 wireless transmitter for users that need to get photos off the camera and out into the world quickly.

There’s also a remote port, a USB type C connector, HDMI out and a flash sync port. Canon has incorporated some pretty neat networking updates, including the ability for the 1D X III to use multiple network protocols simultaneously. So, as an example, you can remote-control the camera with the EOS Utility and its built-in Wi-Fi connection while the camera is set up to upload files to an FTP server with the WFT-E9 adapter.

Hands on with the Canon EOS-1D X Mark III

We have a lot more in-depth coverage in our EOS-1D X Mark III initial review, so head on over there for sample images, a video reel, and a more in-depth look at its all-new autofocus system.

What do you think of Canon’s latest flagship? Should it have been a mirrorless camera with the RF mount? Is it going to be the ‘last great DSLR?’ Is this a sign that DSLRs are going to be relevant for years and years to come? Let us know in the comments.

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4K sample reel: The Canon EOS-1D X Mark III goes to the blacksmith

09 Jan

When we learned that the Canon EOS-1D X Mark III would be one of the most capable stills and video hybrid cameras around, we knew we wanted to do some shooting and see for ourselves what it’s capable of. So we made some calls and wound up at Lawless Forge, a blacksmith shop in south Seattle, and got to work.

All footage was shot on a pre-production camera in Canon Log using the full width of the sensor at 4K/60p or 4K/24p, using IPB compression (CFexpress cards don’t yet grow on trees). Aperture and shutter speed were controlled manually, with Auto ISO gaining up or down as necessary, and ISO values varying from 800 to 6400.

Check out more on the EOS-1D X Mark III’s video specs here

Footage was compiled and edited in Adobe Premiere Pro, using a Canon-supplied Lut and minor tweaking beyond that. Lighting in the space was a mix of cool flickering fluorescents and tungsten (in other words, not good), so keep that in mind as you watch.

Also, if you don’t like guitars, I personally apologize for the music.

You can check out a ton of out-of-camera JPEG still images from this same shoot if you scroll a little ways through our pre-production sample gallery below.

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Read our Canon EOS-1D X Mark III
initial review

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Canon EOS-1D X Mark III pre-production sample gallery (DPReview TV)

08 Jan

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This gallery of images was captured with a pre-production Canon 1D X III during production of DPReview TV’s hands-on preview of the new camera. If you missed the episode you can watch it here.

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DPReview TV: Canon 1D X Mark III for video

08 Jan

Canon’s 1D X Mark III sets a new standard for video specs in a DSLR-style camera. What’s it like to use? Jordan Drake from DPReview TV shares his first impressions of this camera’s impressive video capabilities.

Subscribe to our YouTube channel to get new episodes of DPReview TV every week.

  • Introduction
  • Video resolution and compression
  • Raw video
  • Slow motion
  • Aspect ratio
  • Autofocus
  • Electronic image stabilization
  • Rear display
  • Audio pre-amp
  • Low light
  • HDMI output
  • Separate stills and video settings
  • Conclusion

Sample video

Want to see more video from the Canon 1D X III? Here’s a sample reel we shot with the help of Lawless Forge in Seattle, WA.

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Gear of the Year 2019 – Jeff’s choice: Canon PowerShot G5 X Mark II

13 Dec
Photo: Dan Bracaglia

It goes without saying that a lot of cameras come and go through the DPReview office. Over the last year, most of them have been something you either can’t carry around for hours, or don’t want to (looking at you, Panasonic Lumix DC-S1).

One of the few actual compacts that we received (and reviewed) was the Canon PowerShot G5 X Mark II, which was announced alongside its nearly identical twin, the G7 X Mark III. The latter provides additional video features, while the former – targeted more toward enthusiasts – eschews these in exchange for an electronic viewfinder.

ISO 125 | 1/1600 sec | F4.5 | 69mm equiv.
Photo by Jeff Keller

When I first laid eyes (and hands) on the PowerShot G5 X Mark II, it was very obvious what camera Canon was going after: the Sony Cyber-shot RX100 V. They both have fast lenses with a control ring around them, a centered, pop-up flash and tilting LCDs. Even the button layouts are similar. And let’s not forget the EVF that rises at the push of the button: a feature so similar that I wonder if Sony licensed the design to Canon.

ISO 125 | 1/1000 sec | F4 | 30mm equiv.
Photo by Jeff Keller

Despite their similarities, I’d grab the Canon every time, mainly because I find the shooting experience much more engaging. The front grip and thumb rest are perfect, and the rubberized front plate prevents the camera from sliding out of my hands. I tend to adjust exposure compensation fairly often, and I like that I don’t have to move my thumb to reach the provided dial that adjusts that setting. While I like the clicky control ring around the lens, I’m still not a fan of the small, fiddly dial on the back.

ISO 125 | 1/500 sec | F8 | 120mm equiv.
Photo by Jeff Keller

And then there’s the EVF. It’s not the cool new design found on the Sony RX100 VI and above, which extends the eyepiece automatically, but I don’t mind having to manually do so. What I don’t like is that it’s very easy to press it back in when your eye is to the finder, at least with glasses on. Speaking of glasses, the OLED EVF allows me to wear my polarized sunglasses without a problem (which can be a problem with LCD panels). The location of the EVF also keeps my nose off of the screen, which is always a plus.

ISO 125 | 1/1600 sec | F4.5 | 24mm equiv.
Photo by Jeff Keller

A lot of enthusiast compacts make compromises in order to get fast maximum apertures. On the RX100 V and Panasonic LX10, the focal length tops out at around 70mm equivalent. The Sony RX100 VI and VII have very ambitious 24-200mm equiv. lenses, but they let in 1.3 stops less light than the G5 X II.

Converted from Raw using ACR 12. Exposure and sharpness adjusted.
ISO 125 | 1/100 sec | F2.8 | 108mm equiv.
Photo by Jeff Keller

For me, the G5 X II has just the right balance. The equivalent focal length of the lens is 24-120mm, which is more than enough for the kind of shooting I typically do. The max aperture range of F1.8-2.8 gives it good light low performance and nice background blur, especially on macro shots than I enjoy taking.

ISO 200 | 1/400 sec | F3.2 | 24mm equiv.
Photo by Jeff Keller

I spent several weekends with the camera, taking it over the Cascade mountains and back again (among other places), and I have no complaints about the quality of the photos I captured. A lot of people like to crow about the vibrance of Canon color, and I’m one of them. I took a number of photos in low light and was able to pull up the shadows without too large of a noise increase: at least for my needs (read: social media).

When all is said and done, I found the Canon PowerShot G5 X Mark II to be a great ‘daily driver’. It’s a camera that I can stuff into a back pocket and take for walk around town – in bright or low light – and get great results straight out of the camera.

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Compact and feature-packed: Our Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mark III review

12 Dec

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Silver Award

82%
Overall score

The Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mark III is a 20MP Micro Four Thirds camera aimed at enthusiast photographers, but could be a good option for beginners that want a system to grow into. It features the same sensor, AF system and 4K video capture as the flagship E-M1 II and E-M1 X, in a considerably smaller, lighter package.

It’s the first in the E-M5 line to offer on-sensor phase detect autofocus, which includes both face and eye detection modes. The updated AF system is complemented by a 10 fps max burst rate in AF-C. The camera also gets a new image stabilization system, an updated EVF and some small ergonomic improvements.

Key takeaways

  • 20MP Four Thirds sensor
  • 121-point hybrid autofocus system
  • 50MP high-res shot mode
  • 10 fps burst shooting with AF-C
  • Cinema (DCI) and UHD 4K video
  • Up 6.5EV of image stabilization (CIPA-rating) with supported lenses
  • 2.36M-dot OLED viewfinder with 60 fps refresh rate
  • Extensive direct controls and articulating touchscreen
  • Weather-sealed body
  • In-camera USB charging
  • 1/8000 sec mechanical shutter speed

The E-M5 III will be available at the end of November for a body-only price of $ 1,199.99, CAN $ 1,499.99 in either black or silver. It will also be available kitted with the weather-sealed Olympus 14-150mm F4-5.6 II for $ 1,799.99, CAN $ 2,249.99.


What’s new and how it compares

The E-M5 III is Olympus’s smallest, lightest 20MP camera. Here’s what else is new and how it stacks up against its peers.

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Body and controls

The rear of the E-M5 III is largely unchanged, but some significant changes have been made to both the camera’s top plate and the EVF.

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Shooting experience

Photo editor Dan Bracaglia spent 48 hours shooting in the deserts of Southern, Utah, E-M5 III in hand.

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Image quality

The E-M5 III is capable of some excellent image quality, up there with the best that Micro Four Thirds can produce today.

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Autofocus and performance

While the E-M5 III comes with an autofocus system that shares its spec with higher-end models, we were a bit disappointed with its performance.

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Video

With incredible stabilization, a mic input, an articulating touchscreen and good quality files, the E-M5 III is a good candidate for video shooting.

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Conclusion

We find the E-M5 III to be a fantastic companion for travel and general photography, producing excellent images under a wide range of scenarios.

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Sample gallery

Curious what kind of files the E-M5 III produces? Have a look at our vast sample gallery.

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