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Posts Tagged ‘samples’

Panasonic Lumix FZ80/FZ82 real world samples gallery

01 May
ISO 80 | 1/200 sec | F4.4 Photo by Jeff Keller

Panasonic’s latest update to its consumer superzoom line, the FZ80, comes with a crazy 20-1200mm F2.8-5.9 zoom lens, 4K video capture and Panasonic’s usual suite of 4K photo modes, and comes in at a very affordable price. We’ve taken it out and about on some rare sunny Seattle days to see what it can do.

See our Panasonic FZ80 sample gallery

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Serious speed: Sony a9 real world samples gallery

27 Apr

The Sony a9 made headlines shortly after its announcement due in no small part to its laundry list of impressive specifications. With 20fps burst shooting, 693 autofocus points and a 3.7m dot electronic OLED viewfinder with no blackout at all in continuous shooting, this camera’s got some serious specs and Sony has made some serious claims about its performance.

During our time in New York for the announcement, we were able to learn the ins-and-outs of the camera while photographing hockey players, figure skaters, and a full-on track meet to see just how the camera fared – and it fared well. But don’t take our word for it, check it out for yourself in our real world samples gallery. The AF system combined with 20 fps allowed us to nail the exact moment, while the excellent JPEG engine retained detail and minimized noise even at ISOs in the thousands.

See the Sony a9 real world samples gallery

But we’ve also been hard at work digging into the Sony a9 as much as we could, given our limited time with it and lack of Raw support. Our shooting experience has been updated with impressions of both JPEG image quality and autofocus performance.

DPR’s updated impressions of the Sony a9

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Sigma sd Quattro H real world samples gallery

09 Apr
ISO 200 | 1/500 sec | F5.6
Photo by Carey Rose

With a large APS-H sized Foveon sensor, Sigma’s sd Quattro H promises a lofty 51MP of equivalent resolution when compared to more traditional Bayer-sensor cameras. The sd Quattro lineup is also the first series of Sigma cameras ever to output Raw files in an accessible DNG format, meaning you can open them with almost any Raw converter, as opposed to being locked into Sigma’s Photo Pro software. Take a look through our gallery of cherry blossoms, cars, cityscapes and studio shots and download a few files to check out the impressively sharp Foveon rendering for yourself.

Check out our Sigma sd Quattro H sample gallery

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Re-make/Re-model: Leica Summaron 28mm F5.6 Samples

24 Mar

Leica’s new Summaron 28mm F5.6 is an incredibly slim pancake lens, originally sold in the 1950s, and recently re-released in M-mount. Does it make sense in 2017?

Check out our gallery of sample images, and watch this space for a shooting report, coming in the next few days.

View our gallery of sample images

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Leica M10 in Japan: Updated samples gallery

12 Mar

The Leica M10 is our favorite digital M-series camera yet, and we’ve been itching to get our hands on it again, ever since we had to return an early pre-production unit to Leica. Fortunately, another camera arrived just in time for a recent trip to Japan.

We spent a few days with it in Yokohama, Tokyo, Kyoto and Kanazowa, and we’ve updated our gallery of samples. A shooting experience article is on the way, but in the meantime, check out our expanded gallery, including a few shots taken with a couple of very nice vintage lenses…

View our updated Leica M10 samples gallery

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Panasonic Lumix DC-GX850 real world samples

08 Mar

The Panasonic GX850 represents the merging of its ‘beauty-oriented’ GF-series and its ultra-small GM-series. Like the GM5 it replaces, it’s just barely coat pocketable with its collapsible 12-32mm F3.5-5.6 kit lens attached. Small as it is, it’s mighty enough to offer a 16MP Four Thirds sensor capable of 4K/30p video capture and Panasonic’s array of 4K-based stills modes. 

See our Panasonic Lumix GX850
sample gallery

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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First samples from the new Nikon 70-200mm F2.8E FL ED VR

02 Feb
ISO 100, 1/400 sec at F4.5. Photo by Dan Bracaglia

The Nikkor 70-200mm F2.8E FL ED VR is the third version of Nikon’s workhorse telezoom. Most of us on staff have spent a bit of time with the previous two versions, and the latest iteration features a new optical design, improved VR and an electromagnetic diaphragm.

We have not had it in the office long but the impression already is that it’s both impressively sharp and well-stabilized. In short, it’s going to appeal to a wide range of photographers. We’ll be sure to add additional images to this gallery once we’ve had more time with the lens, but for now take a look at some initial samples.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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The M U want: Leica M10 First Impressions Review and Samples

19 Jan

The Leica M10 is a 24MP, full-frame, manual focus camera with an archaic coupled rangefinder focusing system, a tunnel-type optical viewfinder, no video mode and not even so much as a USB socket. And it’s absolutely lovely.

Leica M10: Key Features

  • ‘Newly developed’ 24MP full-frame CMOS sensor
  • 1.04 million-dot rear LCD (with Corning Gorilla glass)
  • 5 fps max continuous shooting for up to 30 Raw frames
  • ISO 100-6400 (extendable to 50,000)
  • Center-weighted (RF), spot and ‘multi-field’ (LV) metering modes
  • Revised menu system (including customizable ‘favorites’ menu)
  • Automatic lens corrections with 6-bit coded lenses
  • Compatible with ‘Visoflex’ 2.4m-dot EVF for eye-level live view shooting
  • ~210 shot battery life (CIPA)
  • Built-in WiFi

Leica is a refreshingly unusual company in the modern camera industry – weird, wonderful, gleefully anachronistic but never, ever, boring. As such, Leica is one of those companies that I’ve always enjoyed writing about.

This is the kind of picture that generally, I don’t take. But being handed a Leica to review spurred me to make a bit more effort to get ‘street’ shots on a recent trip to New York. I used live view to capture this waist-level image without drawing attention to myself.

35mm F1.4 Summilux ASPH. F2.8 (ish), ISO 500. (Converted from Raw)

In fact, the very first camera that I ever reviewed right at the beginning of my career was a Leica. This was more than ten years ago, around the same time that the M8 was released, but I wasn’t (yet) trusted with such a prestigious product. The camera that I was handed to review was one of those rebadged Panasonics that the German company still officially maintains in its lineup, but doesn’t really talk about anymore. I forget the exact model, but it wasn’t particularly good. I seem to remember high noise levels, lens aberrations and clumsy, detail-destroying noise reduction being the main areas of complaint, all of which were enough to take the (figurative) shine off what was physically a beautiful camera, and all of which I dutifully reported in my review.

While the camera was forgettable, more than a decade on, that review still sticks in my mind. It was shortly after filing my draft that my editor at the time pulled me over, the printout in his hand, to explain that ‘there are certain words we do not use about Leica’. Apparently, ‘disappointing’ was one of those words, indicated (ironically) with large red rings of ink, wherever I had used it.

My draft was massaged accordingly, and I didn’t review another Leica camera for a long time.

For a great many years, there really was a kind of ‘reality distortion field’ around Leica, and to some extent there still is. With some exceptions (the Q being one of them), the company specializes in high-cost nouveau-classic products with few objective advantages over their competitors. It’s all about the look. It’s all about the feel. It’s all about the magic. It’s all about Das Wesentliche1.

When on occasion Leica has tried something genuinely new, like the brushed-aluminum touch-sensitive experiment that was the Leica T2, it typically hasn’t made quite the same impact on the group psychology of photographers and photography writers as its M, R and (more recently) S-series.

‘The Leica Effect’

I’m not immune to the ‘Leica effect’ myself. I owned and used an M3 for years, and wildly impractical as it was (considering I was attempting to make a career as a 21st Century music photographer3) I’ve always regretted selling it. There’s just something about the M series, some intangible magic when compared to the average mass-produced camera, regardless of whatever new and wonderful technologies they might lack by comparison.

I still maintain that if you can accurately focus on a human subject with a fast Leica prime wide-open, you’ve earned the right to call yourself a photographer. It’s not easy – and that’s the point.

It’s been a long time since I shot live music, too. I didn’t expect much when I took the M10 to a rock concert, but apparently my focusing gets better after a couple of beers. 

35mm F1.4 Summilux ASPH. F2 (ish), ISO 3200. (Converted from Raw) 

For all that, I’ve never really enjoyed the digital M-series models. The M8’s APS-H sensor felt like a compromise, and both that camera and the full-frame M9 always felt a little bloated, their shutters a bit too loud, their images a bit too noisy. Things got better – the Typ 240 and Typ 262 are very good cameras, and the Monochroms are fun – but neither they nor their predecessors ever really truly felt like a continuation of the classic film models. Leica claims that adding a movie mode to the Typ 240 was in response to demand from its customers, but the idea of shooting video on a rangefinder always seemed a bit silly to me.

The M10 can’t shoot video – let’s just get that out of the way. If you really need video in an M-series body, the Typ 240 is still available.

Personally, as you might be able to tell, I like the M10 a lot more than the Typ 240 and 262. There’s no single major change which makes all the difference, but rather a raft of little tweaks which add up to (in my opinion) a more attractive product than the the digital Ms which came before it. 

First Look: Leica M10


1. Which roughly translates as ‘The pure / the essential / the heart / the bits that really matter’.

2. With original firmware, I should make that clear. It got better.

3. Ask me how that worked out. 

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Panasonic Lumix FZ2500 / FZ2000 real world samples gallery

10 Dec
Straight-out-of-camera JPEG. 132mm equiv., ISO 125, 1/640 sec, F4.5. Photo by Carey Rose

The Panasonic Lumix FZ2500 / FZ2000, the company’s followup to the popular FZ1000, comes with a whole new 24-480mm F2.8-4.5 lens in front of its 20MP 1″-type CMOS sensor. It also comes with a built-in neutral density filter, 4K video and 4K photo modes and Panasonic’s Depth-from-Defocus (DFD) technology for quick and accurate autofocus.

We’ve taken advantage of some rare sunny weather in the midst of this Seattle winter to put together a samples gallery from this stills and video superzoom – take a look.

See our Panasonic FZ2500 / FZ2000 real world samples gallery

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus E-M1 Mark II real-world samples gallery and Iceland gallery update

13 Nov
Straight-out-of-camera JPEG – check out the Raw processed image in the gallery. Olympus 25mm F1.2 Pro, ISO 1600, 1/250 sec, F1.2. Photo by Carey Rose

As Olympus’ top-end flagship, the OM-D E-M1 Mark II isn’t small for a Micro Four Thirds camera, but it’s built to be incredibly tough and has room for some impressive technology on the inside and abundant, customizable controls on the outside.

We soaked it at a frisbee match, cranked the ISO at a rock show, took it to the streets and the studio, and tried out the new High Res Shot mode (we even tried it with a live subject with questionable success). Take a look at how the camera’s handled a variety of situations as we continue to work through our forthcoming review.

We’ve also gotten preliminary Adobe Camera Raw support, and have updated our previous Iceland gallery with some new Raw conversions.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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