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Posts Tagged ‘Thursday’

Throwback Thursday: the dual-lens Kodak EasyShare V570

08 Dec

Long before anybody put two lenses in a smartphone, the Kodak EasyShare V570 put dual lenses and sensors under the same roof – 23mm and 37-117mm equivalent folded-optic lenses coupled with 5MP CCD sensors. Introduced nearly 11 years ago for CES 2006, the V570 offered other cutting-edge features including:

  • 2.5″ 230k-dot LCD
  • In-camera distortion correction
  • 180-degree panorama mode, an ‘industry exclusive’
  • 2.3 fps continuous shooting
  • VGA 30p video recording

It shipped with a ‘Photo Frame 2’ dock, which was a multitasking charger/image transfer/snazzy camera display. The charging feature was especially useful, since the V570’s battery was only rated to 150 shots per charge – pretty bad even by 2006 standards.

We didn’t review the V570, but then friend-of-DPR and current DPR staffer Jeff Keller wrote about it on DCResource. He disliked that Kodak advertised the camera as having a 5x zoom lens, when it was really just a wide angle prime and a 3x zoom that you could switch between. Still, it was the first dual-lens implementation we can remember, and even though it didn’t catch on with camera manufacturers, the concept has found new life in smartphones like the iPhone 7 Plus. 

Kodak V570 Sample Gallery

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Throwback Thursday: Olympus E-10

02 Dec

Throwback Thursday: Olympus E-10

Back in the early days of consumer digital photography, I was a bit of an Olympus fanboy. My first camera was the D-300L (launched in 1996 for around $ 900), which had a resolution of just 786k pixels. A year later I stepped up to the D-600L ($ 1299), which increased the resolution to 1.4MP and had a 3X zoom lens and, in a first for consumer cameras, a TTL optical viewfinder.

Then, in the year 2000, a really interesting camera arrived and, as you may have guessed, it was an Olympus. That camera was the E-10 and, after shelling out two grand, it would be mine.

Throwback Thursday: Olympus E-10

Even if you ignore its hallmark feature (described later), the E-10’s specs were amazing for its time. It had a 4MP 2/3″ CCD, fast and very high quality lens with manual focus and zoom rings, twin control dials, an articulating LCD and much, much more.

In the above image alone you’ll notice its numerous collection of I/O ports, which included flash sync, remote control, USB and A/V output. There were plenty of direct controls, too, which kept you at an arm’s-length from the camera’s menu system.

The body was super-solid – perhaps more than some DSLRs of that era – and was weather-sealed.

Throwback Thursday: Olympus E-10

Oh, that lens. The E-10’s 35-140mm equivalent lens has a maximum aperture range of F2-2.4, both aspherical and ED elements, and excellent sharpness. The zoom could be adjusted just like on an SLR – no buttons needed to be pressed. Focusing, on the other hand, was ‘fly by wire.’ The lens was threaded and Olympus offered some pretty crazy conversion lenses for it.

The E-10 had a pretty advanced AF system for that era. It first used infrared light (from a transmitter seen here) to get a rough idea as to the distance of the subject. Once that was done a more traditional contrast-detect system was used for fine-tuning.

Throwback Thursday: Olympus E-10

Another nice feature on the E-10 was its articulating LCD (look how thick that enclosure is!). The 1.8″ screen could tilt upward 90° and downward about 20°. The E-10 also had a large optical viewfinder with 95% coverage, though DPReview founder Phil Askey had some issues with it.

Rear controls were conventional and could’ve come off of any camera made that year.

Throwback Thursday: Olympus E-10

A number of things that made the E-10 feel a bit ‘pro’ were its dual control dials and backlit LCD info display. That SM/CF switch is how you toggled between memory card slots. Yes, the E-10 had two; one for SmartMedia and the other for CompactFlash. Looking back, I still have to laugh at the dedicated spots on the mode dial for connecting to a printer or computer. Those were the days (or not.)

Throwback Thursday: Olympus E-10

I’ve covered many of the things that made the Olympus E-10 such an impressive camera, but I’ve been saving what makes it unique for the end. The E-10 was the first camera to allow photographers to use live view at the same time as the optical viewfinder. It does so via a ‘beam splitter’ which sent a TTL view of the scene to the camera’s large OVF and directly to that 4MP CCD. 

This was all very impressive, though the live view resolution was poor. And, for those wondering, the E-10 could not capture video. Can’t have everything, I guess. 

Overall, though, the E-10 was a heck of a camera, and one that I used for many years (and still have today.) For those who wanted an SLR camera that didn’t require carrying around extra lenses, there was nothing else like it on the market.

Read DPReview’s Olympus E-10 Review

View Sample Gallery

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Throwback Thursday: Casio QV-4000

25 Nov

Long before there was an app for that, your camera had a scene mode for that.

Cameras and smartphones have gotten pretty good at detecting what kind of scene you’re trying to photograph and optimizing your settings for the best shot, and they’re only getting smarter. But fifteen years ago when we reviewed the Casio QV-4000 such technologies didn’t exist.

Instead, you got ‘Best Shot Modes,’ a collection of exposure modes designed to help you match the right camera settings to the scene you were shooting. There were 5 pre-installed on the QV-4000, but you could install a hundred more by simply loading them from the CD-ROM that came with the camera onto your Compact Flash card.

So with more than a hundred modes to choose from, you can imagine how specific they get. In no particular order, here are some of my favorites:

  • Photo of a toadstool 
  • Portrait in a field of flowers
  • Photo at a hotel
  • Photo of a mossy wood

You can see them all here. And even though they seem a little funny now, Casio was only trying to answer a question we still haven’t quite cracked: how do you help the average consumer take better photos? Automatic scene detection and technology like Google’s HDR+ solve some problems, but I know I still see plenty of backlit portraits and blurry ‘night at the bar’ photos in my Facebook feed.

The answer is starting to look different than a hundred different user-selectable scene modes, but the problem is sure the same.

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Throwback Thursday: Fujifilm FinePix F601 Zoom

17 Nov

One of the more unusually shaped cameras from the early 2000s was Fujifilm’s F601 Zoom. This vertically oriented compact wasn’t designed by F.A. Porsche like previous models, but its gentle curves and metal lens cover were still eye-catching. Fujifilm’s F601 Zoom was the world’s first 6 megapixel compact (along with its F610Z sibling), and through a trickery involving its Super CCD HR sensor, could output an image up to 12 million pixels!

In his review, Phil Askey liked its vivid color reproduction and welcomed the inclusion of manual exposure controls, but wasn’t a fan of the camera’s 89% coverage in live view. You can still find the camera brochure on Fujifilm’s website – go take a look, it’s a treat. 

While the F601’s unique design didn’t endure, it’s a reminder of experimental early days in digital photography. 

Read our full Fujifilm FinePix F601 Zoom review

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Throwback Thursday: Olympus C-3040 Zoom

10 Nov

In the year 2000, Olympus updated its enthusiast-friendly digital zoom compact. The C-3040 Zoom bears the adorably 90’s ‘Camedia’ logo, and when it was introduced updated the previous model with some cosmetic improvements, a faster lens and a couple of feature updates like one-touch manual white balance. This 3.3MP powerhouse fetched $ 800 when we reviewed it in 2001 – here’s what all those clams got you:

  • 3MP 1/1.8″ CCD sensor
  • Built-in optical viewfinder
  • 320 x 240 video at 12.5 fps without audio
  • 3.5 fps burst shooting
  • 1.8″ LCD
  • Auto, 100, 200, 400 ISO settings
  • Full manual exposure modes

The C-3040 Zoom offered a 35-105mm equiv. F1.8-2.6 zoom, a boost over its predecessor’s 32-96mm equiv. F2.8 constant aperture lens. When we reviewed it we found the new lens to be noticeably sharper, and welcomed the minor improvements, but considered Olympus to be trying to extend the shelf life of an already aging design without bringing anything new to the market. Still, for $ 800 in its time it was a good bargain.

Did you own the 3040 Zoom or its predecessor? Do you have fond memories of using one? Share in the comments below.

See our Olympus C-3040 Zoom Review

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Throwback Thursday: Nikon D40

04 Nov

Nikon’s first truly beginner-friendly DSLR turns 10 years old this month. The Nikon D40 was introduced in November of 2006, bringing with it for the first time on-screen tips for novice digital photographers. It was the company’s smallest and lightest DSLR at the time, paring down some of the more advanced features found on the likes of the D80 and the D50, and was the first Nikon DSLR to do away with a built-in AF motor. For $ 600 you got:

  • A 6MP CCD sensor
  • 3-point AF Multi-CAM530 sensor
  • 2.5 fps burst shooting
  • A ‘large’ 2.5″ 230k-dot LCD
  • ISO 200-1600 with 3200 expansion
  • A version II AF-S DX 18-55mm kit lens

Reviewer and site founder Phil Askey was careful to point out that the D40 wasn’t just a dumbed down D50 – it brought numerous improvements that happened to be targeted toward a first-time DSLR owner. D40 shoppers weren’t likely to care about the lack of support for older lenses, and the resolution was more than enough (who needs 8 megapixels?) for its target audience. Askey did lament the loss of a top-panel LCD (they still haven’t found their way back into Nikon’s entry level) and the fact that shooting Raw + JPEG recorded only basic-quality JPEGs. 

Overall though, the Nikon D40 went down as Highly Recommended, and an excellent value. Did you own the D40? Do you feel old now? Let us know your D40 memories in the comments below. 

Read our full Nikon D40 Review

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Throwback Thursday: Game Boy Camera

27 Oct

Throwback Thursday: Game Boy Camera

It’s probably no surprise that you won’t find a review or a score for the Game Boy Camera in DPReview’s archives. Even by 1998 standards, the Game Boy Camera was a bit underwhelming in terms of technology. It took 0.5MP still images and displayed them at half that resolution. Output options were extremely limited: you either displayed your photos on the screen and passed your Game Boy around the room, or you acquired the Game Boy Printer – a glorified receipt printer that spits out tiny renditions of your subject on thermal paper.

But it was also the first camera that some of us on the DPR staff called our own, and for that reason holds a special place in our hearts. Take a look back at the Game Boy camera with us in all its 8-bit glory.

Throwback Thursday: Game Boy Camera

The camera itself attaches to a standard Game Boy cartridge, and the camera unit itself can swivel 180-degrees to face forward or backward. That’s right, Nintendo was so far ahead of the selfie craze that we didn’t even have an obnoxious name for them yet.

Throwback Thursday: Game Boy Camera

The menu system is about as straightforward as it gets: your three options are Shoot, View and Play. Of course, it needed to have a game element, so the Game Boy Camera offers three simple mini-games. But the real attraction is that camera on top. Hitting ‘shoot’ brings you to a screen where you can choose to just jump right into a fantastically laggy live view experience, or navigate to menu options called things like ‘Items’ and ‘Magic’. There’s a kind of Easter Egg if you select an option called ‘Run,’ but the less said about that the better.

Throwback Thursday: Game Boy Camera

Here’s what’s surprising about the Game Boy Camera – it offers quite a bit more than meets the eye. There are time-lapse, panorama and self-timer options. Nine different ‘trick lenses’ unlock more effects, like posterize, mirror and a 4×4 collage. You can also add hotspots to images, that when clicked take you to other images in your album. If you’ve got the time and imagination, you can actually do a lot with it. Heck, the cover of one of Neil Young’s albums was taken with a Game Boy Camera.

That said, low light shooting is not at all a strength of the camera, so any photo taken in less than ideal light comes out as not much more than some dark, indistinguishable pixels.

Throwback Thursday: Game Boy Camera

Choosing ‘View’ from the main screen brings you to a simple 3×3 grid where you can select images individually to view at larger size (weirdly, you can’t scroll between images in this view). On this screen you can unleash all kinds of mischief – zany borders, eyeball-shaped stamps and comments. But the party really started when you hooked up your Game Boy Printer.

Throwback Thursday: Game Boy Camera 

That’s right, if you really wanted to share your photos, you had to shell out some more cash for the printer. It outputs images on tiny strips of thermal paper at about the size of a postage stamp. The best part? The back of the paper can be peeled away to reveal an adhesive strip, which was ideal for attaching to photos to your Trapper Keeper.

Throwback Thursday: Game Boy Camera

The thing we remember most about the Game Boy camera is that it was just plain fun. In 1998, digital cameras were still making their way into the hands of the masses. Being a kid and suddenly having the ability to attach a camera to your beloved handheld game system was kind of magical. It encouraged silliness, inspired creativity and was the first step toward a lifetime of photo geekery, at least for a few of us.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Throwback Thursday: the Kodak DC265, a user-programmable compact

20 Oct

Throwback Thursday: Kodak DC265

When you think of unique cameras, the Kodak DC265 (announced in 1999 for $ 899) probably doesn’t come to mind. The first thing you probably notice is its unusual shape and ‘foot’ to keep it from tipping over. But what really made it unique is that it ran Flashpoint’s Digita OS, which was fully scriptable (the company and OS did not last long.) In other words, developers could add new features by writing some code and putting it onto a memory card. Several Kodak models at the time supported Digita, as did those from HP, Konica Minolta and Epson.

Before we get to that, here’s a quick overview of the DC265. It had an F3.0-4.7, 38-115mm equivalent lens, which is so loud when it’s extending that it made my coworkers in other cubicles wonder what on earth was going on. It had a whopping 1.6 Megapixel CCD, an external autofocus sensor (that we think involves infrared light) and an optical viewfinder that isn’t nearly as large as it appears from this view.

Throwback Thursday: Kodak DC265

While the DC265 had a ‘regular’ menu system (more on that in a minute), you could also use the LCD info display and a pair of buttons to quickly adjust settings. In 1999 this was a pretty advanced camera, offering burst shooting (at a whopping 3 fps, with live view disabled), time lapse and manual focus. It takes the camera and absurd amount of time to save a burst of photos to its memory card; we’re talking like 90 seconds.

While it looks like the DC265 doesn’t have much of a grip, it’s actually quite comfortable in the hand. The thumb rest is on the lower-right side of the back panel and works in conjunction with the ‘foot’ shown earlier, making this unusually shaped camera easy to hang on to.

Throwback Thursday: Kodak DC265

The DC265 was loaded with I/O ports. You’ve got your 8-pin Mini-DIN port for connecting to a Mac or PC, A/V out and DC-in. And what’s hiding under that last port? A flash sync port! There’s a dedicated volume button, a feature which didn’t really catch on.

You can see that the previous owners – a school in Bellevue, WA – etched their name onto the side of the camera for all eternity.

Throwback Thursday: Kodak DC265

The DC265 had two doors on its right side. One holds 4 AA batteries, while the other is where you’ll put that CompactFlash card. I had to dig through my collection of ancient memory cards to find one that the camera could read (96MB in this case). 

The battery life on the DC265 is terrible, which is why NiMH rechargeables were so popular in those days.

Throwback Thursday: Kodak DC265

There are lots of exciting things on the back of the camera which, as you can see, has had a rough life. You’ve got a tiny viewfinder, a mic and speaker, that nice rear thumb rest, plus the zoom controller at the top right.

The mode dial (around the four-way controller) switches between record, playback, connect (to a PC or printer) and ‘info’ mode (which just listed the firmware version, copyright info and a link to Flashpoint’s website.)

Then there’s the LCD, which is truly awful. It’s average-sized for that time period (2″) and the resolution was competitive. However, once you pan the camera or anything moves, everything turns blue and red and the refresh rate is around 3-4 fps (per Phil Askey’s original review.)

To make matters worse: the menus are all in Comic Sans (or something that closely resembles it.)

Throwback Thursday: Kodak DC265

And that leads us to the Kodak DC265’s pièce de résistance: Digita. This scripting language, developed by the now-defunct Flashpoint, was easy for anyone with basic programming experience to learn. Kodak itself offered several scripts for Digita, including one for bracketing that you can see parts of above.

There was also a pretty large home-brew community at the time, with scripts that could generate HTML galleries, have finer control over shutter speed or just play Tic Tac Toe. Scripting got more powerful on later DC-series models (notably the DC290), with the ability to create panoramas or embed GPS data. And while it couldn’t run Crysis, the DC290 could play Doom.

As you probably know by now, Digita didn’t take off. But for a brief moment in time, it let photographers add features to cameras themselves, rather than waiting for the next model to come out.

Kodak deserves a lot of credit for bringing something new to digital photography, whether it was the unique design of the DC265 (and its successor, the DC290) or putting users in control over camera features with Digita. 

For more on the Kodak DC265, check out Phil Askey’s review here on DPR.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Throwback Thursday: Fujifilm F10

14 Oct

Back in the film era it was perfectly possible to buy a compact camera that could match an SLR in image quality terms. Sure, you might lose out on some advanced features, and for the most part you were stuck with a fixed lens, but deep inside, whether you were shooting with an Olympus XA or an OM1, the image was formed on a frame of 35mm film.

Fast forward to the mid-2000s and photographers without the need – or funds – for one of the new breed of ‘affordable’ (sub-$ 1000) consumer DSLRs had to swallow a much more serious compromise. The minuscule sensors found in pretty much every model on the market in 2005 meant cameras that were limited to around ISO 320 or 400 (or if they went higher, they did so using hideous pixel-binning techniques – more on that later).

It’s no coincidence that smartphones, which use similarly diminutive sensors (though with the advantage of a decade of hardware and ISP development) still suffer from similar limitations when shooting in anything less than bright daylight. On top of the terrible low-light performance, all but the best compacts in 2005 were also still plagued by slow operation and poor battery life. Things were getting better, slowly, but the inability to produce decent results in low light was not one of them.

As someone who had spent nearly every waking hour testing, shooting with and writing about compact digital cameras since the late 1990s, by 2005 I was resigned to the fact that I was going to have to wait a long, long time before I could enjoy the convenience of a small camera without having to restrict my shooting to daylight hours. And that’s why I will always have a place in my heart for the subject of this week’s TBT: the Fujifilm FinePix F10 Zoom; it gave me hope. Hope that technology could, in fact, rid the compact camera of its Achilles’ Heel, and that one day, perhaps, a point-and-shoot wouldn’t turn into a ‘point-and-pray’ as soon as the sun went down. It was also the camera I used to take the first picture of my first child just after he was born, which probably adds a little extra rose-tinting to my memory of the F10.

Hidden talents

The camera itself is – and was at the time – unassuming, unremarkable even. Its design was boxy and inelegant (certainly compared to some of the sleek, slim models it was competing with at the time), it had no manual controls to speak of and its lens, a 38-108mm F2.8-5.0 equivalent zoom, was nothing to write home about (by this time 28mm zooms were becoming much more common). And although it had a larger (1/1.7”) sensor than most of its competitors, by the time it launched in February 2005 the premium compact market was already moving from 7MP to 8MP, making the F10’s 6MP output a hard sell in a market defined almost exclusively by megapixel counts.

FinePix F10 Zoom: In good light detail and color were excellent

And then there was the fact that the FinePix F10 sported yet another iteration of Fujfilm’s proprietary ‘SuperCCD’ technology, which used a novel honeycomb pixel layout and had, in previous generations, promised a lot more than it actually delivered – most controversially by scaling up the sensor output to produce files with double the megapixels actually used to capture the image. The general consensus about SuperCCD was that although the technology was certainly impressive, the obvious interpolation artefacts and ugly noise reduction made it far less groundbreaking than the marketing materials suggested.

All such concerns were forgotten when we started testing and using the FinePix F10 Zoom. Not only did the new 6.3MP SuperCCD HR sensor outperform many seven and eight megapixel conventional CCD cameras in bright light, it offered high ISO performance that – though perhaps unimpressive by today’s standards – set a new bar for what a small sensor could produce.

Back in 2005 very few compacts even offered an ISO 800 or ISO 1600 option. Those that did were either painfully noisy or offered a very low resolution, very low fidelity pixel-binned mess.

It’s worth remembering that in 2005 most compact cameras didn’t even offer settings above ISO 400, and those that did used destructive hardware and software tricks to get there (the most common being pixel-binning, which produces results so horribly lacking in detail that we rarely had anything to say about them beyond ‘I guess in an tight spot it’s better than nothing’).

The FinePix F10 Zoom’s surprisingly capable high ISO performance wasn’t just down to the unique design of its SuperCCD sensor (though the efficient pixel design certainly helped); the 5th Generation ‘Real Photo Processor’ (the ‘brains’ of the capture hardware) was critical, too.

In the same way as modern Smartphones owe much of their improved image quality to advances in signal processing (the hardware itself is limited by cost and the laws of physics), Fujifilm had taken a big step towards overcoming the limitations of a small sensor in low light and the result was nothing short of revolutionary. Even flash exposures (which were again controlled by the new Real Photo Processor) were streets ahead of most competitors.

ISO 800 – remarkably usable for a 2005 compact camera

And it wasn’t just the image quality that impressed. Despite looking like a truck, the F10 performed like a sports car, with (for 2005) very short startup times, fast focus and, thanks to a huge lithium-ion power pack, class-leading 500-shot per charge battery life. This really was the compact camera equivalent of a sleeper car.

Room for improvement

Of course it wasn’t all good news – using the camera today I am reminded of just how ugly Fuji’s user interface was back then, how crappy low res screens look, and just how limited the feature set of the F10 was (even by 2005 standards) – though I would add that the performance (speed) and image quality have both held up better than the camera itself. Perhaps the biggest annoyance was the use of a separate ‘terminal adapter’ – Fuji’s designers apparently couldn’t fit A/V, charging and USB ports into the F10’s body (or maybe they forgot and it was too late to fix), so they were supplied separately on an easily misplaced dongle thing.

The genius that was the ‘Terminal Adapter’.

The F10 also used Fujifilm and Olympus’s proprietary xD Picture Cards (introduced a couple of years earlier) for storage. xD, the unwanted successor to the awful, unreliable SmartMedia card, was slower, less capacious and more expensive than the most common format (at the time CompactFlash, itself soon to be displaced by SD cards in compact cameras).

In 2005 this was as good as ISO 1600 got from a small sensor

If I remember correctly, the FinePix F10 didn’t do that well for Fujifilm – it was hard to sell a 6MP camera against similarly-priced but slimmer, prettier, more feature-laden 7 and 8MP competitors. And, inevitably, it wasn’t long before every compact camera added high ISO options that, despite essentially being so bad they should’ve been classified as crimes against photography, were easily spun by marketing teams into ‘amazing low light sensitivity’.

The FinePix F10 was eventually succeeded by the F30 – considered by many to be one of the few real ‘classics’ of the compact point-and-shoot era.

However, it earned a loyal following and over time Fujifilm ironed out some of the kinks – the FinePix F11 followed quickly, adding aperture and shutter priority modes and a higher resolution screen. In 2006 Fujifilm launched the FinePix F30, which offered even better low light performance at up to ISO 3200, and is considered by many to be one of the few ‘classics’ produced during consumer digital photography’s frenetic first decade.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Throwback Thursday: Canon EOS D30

06 Oct

In the year 2000 (somehow, living in it never felt as futuristic and cool as saying it), I enrolled as a first-year undergraduate student1 at the University of Durham. For many among the student body, the most exciting thing that happened that year was the use by Warner Brothers of parts of the Cathedral grounds and cloisters for filming ‘Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone’.

But while my fellow undergraduates occupied themselves with daily games of ‘Where’s Alan Rickman Getting Coffee Today?’2 I was trying to work out how to become a photographer. Back then, the most expensive component of photography was materials. Film, chemicals, paper and of course the associated hardware. An enlarger with a decent lens, tanks, trays and the physical space required to set it up. I didn’t have a darkroom at home, so I made full use of the facilities both at my college and later, when studying abroad in France.

Over the course of my first year at Durham I took thousands of photographs, experimenting with different styles, different film stocks, and different ways of processing and creating images. Serious digital imaging was still out of reach to all but the wealthiest of enthusiasts at that point, but our student-run website bought a Canon Digital IXUS V in 2001 which I shot with a lot. Although it only offered 2 million pixels, had a crappy battery life and barely any zoom, after a long, smelly day in the darkroom, the IXUS V gave me a refreshing taste of the convenience – and potential – of digital imaging.

That potential had come a little bit closer to being realized late the previous year, when Canon released the EOS D30.

The D30 was a groundbreaking camera for a number of reasons. Not only was it Canon’s first properly home-grown DSLR (previous efforts had been collaborations with Kodak, and were priced for the pro market), it was the first DSLR with an APS-C format CMOS sensor, and the first to come in at (just) under $ 3000, body only.

I read early previews and reviews of the D30 voraciously. The sheer potential of the thing was incredible. Along with many other photography nerds at the time I had a whole new language to learn. Raw files. JPEGs. A few terms, like ‘unsharp mask’ I was familiar with from the darkroom, but others like ‘white balance’ and ‘color space’ were alien.

It was image quality that really sold the D30. God knows it wasn’t the 3-point autofocus system or the pokey, dark viewfinder. For someone used to shooting with a high-end Canon film SLR, the D30’s core photographic specification must have looked alarmingly primitive (pity the first generation of press photographers who had to use them coming from EOS 1N and EOS 3 bodies) but those files…

Images from the D30 were amazingly clean and detailed, and up to ISO 1600 there was almost no grain – or, as I was learning to call it – noise.

It’s easy to forget that for 35mm film photographers, shooting above ISO 400 was considered a bit risky. There were some decent general-purpose 800 ISO color emulsions, but film (color film at any rate) was never really great for low-light handheld shooting. As such, the ability to shoot good, clean, contrasty, colorful and virtually grain-free images above ISO 400 on the D30 was a revelation. The late Michael Reichmann took a lot of flak from purists back then for saying that images from the D30 were essentially better than film, but I thought he was right when he published that article, and I still do.

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When we shot our first Field Test video in 2014, I took my D30 along to record some ‘behind the scenes’ shots of the (then) brand-new Canon EOS 7D II being put through its paces.


Such was the demand for the D30 when it was finally released that they were pretty scarce. Only once do I remember seeing a non-professional with one. He was a guest in the restaurant I waited in3 during my university holidays and he had it out on the table (of course he did). The restaurant was one of those rural boutique hotel restaurants with Michelin Star aspirations and prices to match, but too many covers (and too much corner-cutting) to ever be awarded one. At the time it used to attract a lot of what the head waiter dismissively termed ‘BDGs’, which stood for ‘builders4 done good’. Lots of money, but lacking in taste. The kind of people who would order a soufflé and then ask for ketchup.5 D30 man was a BDG.

As a 19 year-old student it pained me to see him flashing around a $ 3000 camera which was fabulously beyond my means, and that he clearly didn’t know how to use. But it delighted me when, towards the end of the meal, he drunkenly spilled red wine all over it.6

Another three years would pass before I owned my own DSLR, an EOS 10D. It took a whole year of working in that same restaurant to pay for it, and I never looked (or went) back. But it was another six years before I finally got my hands on an EOS D30. In 2009, not long before I joined DPReview I found one on Ebay, boxed and in immaculate condition.7 I didn’t need it, but I wanted it. There’s something very special about encountering things that you once lusted over – it’s like a kind of magic. The attraction never quite wears off. I won the bid (a very reasonable £100, if I remember correctly) and fell in love all over again. I still have my D30. I still shoot with it from time to time. And it’s still great.


1. English Literature & Philosophy, in case you were curious. Which, sixteen years on, means you can basically ask me anything about Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. 

2. Vennels, and the Café on the Green mostly I think.

3. For the benefit of our American readers, waited in = served in. I wasn’t just lurking in a restaurant.

4. Also for the benefit of our American readers, builder = construction worker. 

5. I actually saw that happen once, but I was never able to confirm the story of another BDG returning his gazpacho soup because it was cold.

6. Schadenfreude, like gazpacho soup, is best served chilled.

7. Listed by a certain Ray Davies, of Birmingham England. Presumably not that Ray Davies.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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