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Posts Tagged ‘Week’

Celebrate International Dark Sky Week with a night sky time-lapse

29 Apr

A few months ago we featured the work of astrophotographer Matt Dieterich, whose iconic photo of star trails over Mt. Rainier was selected for a special series of U.S. postage stamps commemorating the 100th anniversary of the U.S. National Park Service. If you haven’t seen those photos, you should definitely check them out.

In honor of International Dark Sky Week, Dieterich has just released a time-lapse video called Pacific Northwest Nights, using photos shot while working at Mt. Rainier National Park. Of course, we love it because it highlights places in our own backyard, but even if you’ve never been to our part of the world it’s a beautiful video, and a reminder of why dark skies matter.

If you pay close attention at 0:50 and 2:45 you can even see the glow of headlamps as climbers ascend Mt. Rainier. You can find more of Dieterich’s work at his website and on Instagram.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Hasselblad CEO Oosting to leave next week

27 Jan

The CEO who oversaw Hasselblad’s dramatic turn of fortunes over the past two years is to step down within the next week. Perry Oosting is widely credited with extracting the company from one of the worst periods in its 75-year history by finding new investors and helping to modernize the brand’s produce offering with the H6D and X1D cameras.

Oosting was a member of Hasselblad’s Supervisory board before taking the helm in January 2015. After a long period of creative stagnation and persistent rumors of financial crisis and hostile take-overs, not to mention some very poor branding decisions, Hasselblad made some real progress under Oosting and surprised the world with the first handheld medium-format mirrorless system last year when it launched the X1D.

Oosting leaving the company comes against a background of rumors that DJI has quietly become a majority shareholder. The Chinese drone manufacturer took a ‘strategic’, but minority, stake in Hasselblad in October 2015 – a move that provided the funds needed to launch the H6D and to develop the X1D. However, the massive uptake of the new mirrorless camera system took the company by surprise and rumors suggest Hasselblad had to look to DJI for further investment so it could upscale production to meet demand.

That the company has appointed an interim CEO suggests that Oosting’s departure wasn’t part of a long-term plan – had it been a smoother transition would have been arranged. However, as much as Oosting is seen by some as Hasselblad’s ‘knight in shining armor’ products like the H6D and the X1D must have been on the drawing board and at some stage of planning before he took over, so the company still has the staff to continue along the current path. Paul Bram, who is to stand in as CEO, is already an advisor to the supervisory board, has been involved in decisions around the new direction and has some history with the company, while Ove Bengtson, who was the hands-on guy during the development of the new products, is still the company’s product manager.

Hasselblad hasn’t had much luck with managerial direction over the last ten or so years. It was CEO Larry Hansen who instigated the disastrous rebranding exercise with Sony that spawned the Lunar, and Ian Rawcliffe who worked under Dr. Hansen and became CEO when Hansen was removed suddenly and quietly at the end of 2014. Rawclifffe lasted a year.

With a full order book for the X1D and many previous R&D staff back within the company Hasselblad must now be in a more healthy position than it has been since it only sold film cameras. The challenge of course will be to deliver the pre-ordered X1D units, develop the X series of lenses and maintain the H series at the same time – while still expanding the range of products on offer. I’m told that production of the X1D is now well on track, and was in fact at an all-time high only yesterday.

DJI certainly knows how to create a successful business from its base and factory in China. How that experience will translate for a Swedish factory and ideology, and whether they will be hands-on or hands-off, we shall have to wait and see.

Press release

Hasselblad announces change of management structure

Gothenburg, January 2017

Hasselblad, the leader in high-quality professional medium format cameras today announced that Perry Oosting, CEO, will step down from his role by the end of this month.
Having guided Hasselblad to stability, strong sales as well as the partnership with aerial camera company DJI, CEO Perry Oosting has accomplished what he was asked to achieve and has decided to step down from his operational responsibilities and return to a role as advisor to the board.

“We would like to thank Mr Perry Oosting for his extraordinary efforts. Under his leadership a foundation for future growth is established and the company has extended its customer base substantially,” said the Supervisory Board.

“In the beginning of 2015 I was asked to take the role as CEO to secure sustainable growth and prepare the business for the next steps in its development. During 2016, we launched several new products and a complete new electronic platform. The market reaction to the strategic direction and its products were overwhelming. I would like to thank all involved and foresee a bright future for the team of Hasselblad.” said Perry Oosting.

The Board of Directors has, effective as of Feb 1, appointed Paul Bram, currently Advisor to Hasselblad, as Interim CEO.

“We are happy to announce Mr Paul Bram as an interim CEO. Paul is coming from his position within Hasselblad as Advisor and has a vast leadership experience from his time at Ericsson and Gambro,” said the Supervisory Board.

“I am honoured to take on the role as interim CEO for this iconic and much-loved company. Hasselblad represents outstanding quality, passion for fine art and pioneering technology. Over the coming months we will continue the started path and strategic direction, including accelerating R&D and software development in Gothenburg, Sweden. Going forward I am immensely proud to be part of this continuing journey. ” said Paul Bram.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Firmware update for Panasonic G85 panning issue expected next week

12 Nov

We recently reviewed the Panasonic Lumix G85, and while it scored a Gold Award, eagle-eyed readers noticed a ‘stickiness’ in panning video clips when mechanical image stabilization was turned on. You can see an example in our video above.

Last week we reached out to Panasonic representatives regarding the issue, and today we received the following official statement:

“Less than a week ago, Panasonic became aware of some reports that the G85’s image stabilization wasn’t delivering the same level of smooth performance that the GX85 is while slow panning in video mode. Panasonic is working to solve the issue with a firmware update as soon as we can. Panasonic appreciates all the valuable feedback and always focuses on meeting or exceeding our customers’ expectations.”

We’re told the update should be available as soon as next week, which is very encouraging. I’d like to personally thank our readers for being so quick to notice the panning problem. It’s because of you this issue was so rapidly addressed by Panasonic.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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You can see Elton John’s rare print collection starting this week at Tate Modern

08 Nov

Photos from the Sir Elton John Collection at Tate Modern

Man Ray 1890-1976, Glass Tears 1932. Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper. 229 x 298 mm. The Sir Elton John Photography collection © Man Ray Trust/ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2016

London’s Tate Modern gallery is about to host an exhibition of ‘modernist photography’ drawn entirely from the Elton John Photography Collection that will feature only vintage prints made by the photographers themselves. The show, which comprises 150 images taken by over 60 photographers, is called The Radical Eye: Modernist Photography from the Sir Elton John Collection and will open this Thursday 10th November and will run until 7th May 2017.

The exhibition will concentrate on the ‘coming of age’ of photography which the museum says occurred between 1920 and the 1950s – a period when photography developed into a powerful tool for communicating as technology made it more flexible and convenient to use.

Visitors can expect to see works by Man Ray Kertesz, Rodchenko, Steichen, Tina Modotti, Imogen Cunningham and Margaret Bourke-White, as well as a collection of portraits of some of those photographers themselves taken by other famous artists. According to Tate Modern this will also be the first chance for the public to see an ‘incredible’ series of Man Ray portraits that John has collected and brought together over the last 25 years. Elton John has over 7000 fine art prints in a collection he started in 1991.

For more information on the exhibition, which will cost £16.50 to visit, see the Tate Modern website.

Press release

Tate Modern to exhibit unparalleled modernist photography from the collection of Sir Elton John

Tate Modern today announces a major new exhibition, The Radical Eye: Modernist Photography from the Sir Elton John Collection, opening on 10 November 2016. The show will be drawn from one of the world’s greatest private collections of photography and will present an unrivalled selection of classic modernist images from the 1920s to the 1950s.

Featuring over 150 works from more than 60 artists the exhibition will consist entirely of rare vintage prints, all created by the artists themselves. It will showcase works by seminal figures such as Man Ray, André Kertész, Berenice Abbot, Alexandr Rodchenko and Edward Steichen, offering the public a unique opportunity to see remarkable works up close. The quality and depth of the collection will allow the exhibition to tell the story of modernist photography in this way for the first time in the UK. It also marks the beginning of a long term relationship between Tate and the Sir Elton John Collection.

The exhibition introduces a crucial moment in the history of photography – an exciting rupture often referred to as the ‘coming of age’ of the medium, when artists used photography as a tool through which they could redefine and transform visions of the modern world. Technological advancements gave artists the freedom to experiment and test the limits of the medium and present the world through a new, distinctly modern visual language. This exhibition will reveal how the timeless genres of the portrait, nude and still life were reimagined through the camera, as well as exploring its unique ability to capture street life and the modern world from a new perspective.

Featuring portraits of great cultural figures of the 20th century, including Georgia O’Keeffe by Alfred Stieglitz, Edward Weston by Tina Modotti, Jean Cocteau by Berenice Abbott and Igor Stravinsky by Edward Weston, the exhibition will give insight into the relationships and inner circles of the avant-garde. An incredible group of Man Ray portraits will be exhibited together for the first time, having been brought together by Sir Elton John over the past twenty-five years, depicting key surrealist figures such as Andre Breton and Max Ernst alongside artists including Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso and Dora Maar. Ground-breaking experimentation both in the darkroom and on the surface of the print, such as Herbert Bayer’s photomontage and Maurice Tabard’s solarisation, will examine how artists pushed the accepted conventions of portraiture.

As life underwent rapid changes in the 20th century, photography offered a new means to communicate and represent the world. Alexandr Rodchenko, László Moholy-Nagy and Margaret Bourke-White employed the ‘worm’s eye’ and ‘bird’s eye’ views to create new perspectives of the modern metropolis – techniques associated with constructivism and the Bauhaus. The move towards abstraction will also be charted, from isolated architectural elements to camera-less photography such as Man Ray’s rayographs and Harry Callahan’s light abstractions.

Further themes explored in the exhibition will include new approaches to capturing the human form, highlighted in rare masterpieces such as André Kertész’s Underwater Swimmer, Hungary 1917, while Imogen Cunningham’s Magnolia Blossom, Tower of Jewels 1925 and Tina Modotti’s Bandelier, Corn and Sickle 1927 will feature in a large presentation dedicated to the Still Life. The important role of documentary photography as a tool of mass communication will be demonstrated in Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother 1936 and Walker Evans’ Floyde Burroughs, Hale County, Alabama 1936, from the Farm Security Administration project.

Sir Elton John said: “It is a great honour for David and I to lend part of our collection to Tate Modern for this groundbreaking exhibition. The modernist era in photography is one of the key moments within the medium and collecting work from this period has brought me great joy over the last 25 years. Each of these photographs serves as inspiration for me in my life; they line the walls of my homes and I consider them precious gems. We are thrilled to be part of this collaboration with Tate Modern and hope that the exhibition audience experiences as much joy in seeing the works as I have had in finding them.”

Nicholas Serota, Director, Tate said: “This will be a truly unique exhibition. There are few collections of modernist photography in the UK, so we are delighted that Sir Elton John has allowed us to draw on his incredible collection and give everyone a chance to see these iconic works. Coming face-to-face with such masterpieces of photography will be a rare and rewarding experience.”

The Radical Eye: Modernist Photography from the Sir Elton John Collection at Tate Modern will run from 10 November 2016 until 7 May 2017. It is curated by Shoair Mavlian with senior curator Simon Baker and Newell Harbin, Director of the Sir Elton John Photography Collection, assisted by Emma Lewis. It will be accompanied by a major new catalogue from Tate Publishing, featuring an interview with Sir Elton John by Jane Jackson and an essay by Dawn Ades, Professor Emerita at the University of Essex.

Sir Elton John Photography Collection:

Sir Elton John began collecting photographs in 1991 and his collection is now regarded as one of the leading private photography collections in the world, distinguished by its exceptional quality and remarkable range and depth. From major vintage 20th century modernist works to cutting-edge contemporary images, the collection now holds over 7,000 fine art photographs. To make this exhibition possible Tate has worked in collaboration with Newell Harbin, Director of the Sir Elton John Photography Collection.

Photos from the Sir Elton John Collection at Tate Modern

Herbert Bayer 1900-1985, Humanly Impossible (Self-Portrait) 1932. Photomontage, bromoil gelatin silver print with gouache and airbrush on paper. 394 x 295 mm. The Sir Elton John Photography collection © DACS, 2016

Photos from the Sir Elton John Collection at Tate Modern

Dorothea Lange 1895-1965, Migrant Mother 1936. Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper. The Sir Elton John Photography collection

Photos from the Sir Elton John Collection at Tate Modern

Otto Umbehr (1902-1980), Cat 1927. Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper. The Sir Elton John Photography collection © DACS, 2016

Photos from the Sir Elton John Collection at Tate Modern

Ilse Bing 1899-1998, Dancer, Willem van Loon, Paris 1932. Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper. 276 x 184 mm. The Sir Elton John Photography collection © The Estate of Ilse Bing

Photos from the Sir Elton John Collection at Tate Modern

André Kertész (1894-1985) Mondrian’s Eyeglasses and Pipe, Paris 1926. Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper. 76 x 89 mm. The Sir Elton John Photography collection

Photos from the Sir Elton John Collection at Tate Modern

Alekandr Rodchenko 1891-1956, Shukhov Tower 1927. Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper. The Sir Elton John Photography collection © DACS, 2016

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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26 Spooky Images for Halloween Week

02 Nov

It’s that time of year again when the ghosts and goblins take over and the timid and meek take shelter and hide. Yes, it’s Halloween this coming week.

Depending on where you live, this may be a holiday the kids enjoy, but we adults can have a little fun too. Spooky images of ghosts in the night, apparitions, scary pumpkins and more. Let’s see what these photographers found spooky and captured for Halloween.

Krystian Olszanski

By Krystian Olszanski

Anne Marthe Widvey

By Anne Marthe Widvey

Rachel.Adams

By Rachel.Adams

Chris JL

By Chris JL

Jader56

By jader56

Micadew

By micadew

MattysFlicks

By MattysFlicks

Stefano Corso

By Stefano Corso

Moyan Brenn

By Moyan Brenn

Thomas Hawk

By Thomas Hawk

WxMom

By WxMom

Jpellgen

By jpellgen

Darlene Hildebrandt

By Darlene Hildebrandt

Craig

By Craig

Kevin Dooley

By Kevin Dooley

JLS Photography - Alaska

By JLS Photography – Alaska

Kris Williams

By Kris Williams

Nesster

By Nesster

Thomas Hawk

By Thomas Hawk

Flood G.

By Flood G.

Neil Howard

By Neil Howard

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes

By Adrian Kingsley-Hughes

Andrew Kuznetsov

By Andrew Kuznetsov

Christopher Bligh

By Christopher Bligh

Dan Castleberry

By Dan Castleberry

Hjl

By hjl

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The post 26 Spooky Images for Halloween Week by Darlene Hildebrandt appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Creative Live’s Photo Week starts tomorrow

26 Sep

Now that Photokina is over and we are impatiently waiting for the latest cameras and gear to ship, it’s a perfect time to hone up on our photography skills. Luckily, our friends at Creative Live are hosting their annual Photo Week this week, September 26 – 29.

Photo Week 2016 is four days of photo education, brought to you through 24 live classes taught by top photographers and educators. It is geared toward people who are comfortable with the basics of photography and are looking to expand their knowledge base into more advanced techniques.

Some of the classes we are really looking forward to include Brandon Stanton (the photographer behind the popular photo blog Humans of New York) discussing how his experiences have shaped his work as a storyteller, Vincent Laforet sharing ideas for how to move your business from stills to video, Jared Platt giving tips on a whole range of post-processing topics, and Chase Jarvis opening up about his experiences in the photo industry.

As with all Creative Live classes, you can watch the live classes online for free. If watching the live class won’t fit into your schedule, you can purchase on-demand access so that you can watch it on your own time. The price for the entire week (including all 24 classes) is normally US $ 499, but they are offering it for US $ 199 for a limited time.

But there’s more! DPReview readers can use the discount code ‘DPR10‘ to receive 10% off of any Creative Live class through December 31, 2016.

Check out the Photo Week schedule to see what’s available. What looks interesting to you?

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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One week left to enter the USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Competition!

11 Sep

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There’s just a week left to enter the 2016 USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Competition! 

The USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Competition was founded in 2013 by Charlie Waite, one of the world’s most respected landscape photographers, and this year, the competition is bigger than ever. With a top prize of $ 15,000, the contest spans five main categories, ‘Environmental Value’, ‘My USA’, ‘Black & White’, ‘Classic View’, and ‘Urban’.

In addition to these five categories, DPReview is partnering with the competition to create a new award – ‘Life in the Landscape’, which will be judged by DPReview’s editors and writers. An additional special award, ‘Wild Landscape’ is sponsored by Future Publishing.

The competition is divided into two main classes – the USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Award and the Young USA Landscape Photographer of the Year Award. To enter Young USA Landscape Photographer of the Year, you must be 18 or under on the closing date of September 15, 2016. There are 7 categories within each of the two classes and up to 20 images may be entered across some or all of these categories, and photographers can enter the same image in more than one category and / or special award.

To enter a single image costs $ 10, while $ 30 allows you to enter up to 5 images, and $ 45 allows you to enter up to 20 images. Entrants for the Young USA Photographer of the Year Award pay a flat fee of $ 10 for up to 20 images.

The deadline for entry is September 15th. 

Enter the competition

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Hasselblad to announce ‘game changer’ next week

18 Jun

Hasselblad is on the verge of announcing a new camera that it claims will be a ‘game changer in the world of photography.’ Details are vague but the teaser image, showing a low viewfinder hump supports the rumors of a high-end mirrorless model aimed at the enthusiast and semi-pro camera market.

The camera will be the first expansion of the Swedish company’s product line since it abandoned its much-ridiculed attempt to sell ‘luxury’ versions of Sony-derived models. In an interview with DPReview earlier this year, CEO Perry Oosting suggested the company had learned from the experience and would offer products that build on, and are more consistent with, the brand’s heritage as it sought to expand into different markets. 

The launch will be broadcast live June 22nd at 5:00AM (PST) via the company’s YouTube channel. 

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Week in Review: The flagships are here! The flagships are here!

07 May

Week in Review: The flagships are here!

It’s been a busy week here as three high profile cameras have come sailing through our doors in (roughly) the past seven days: the Pentax K-1, the Canon EOS-1D X II and the Nikon D500. As a result, lots of studio work and samples made their way onto the site. And in an exciting plot twist, we actually had some decent weather! In early May! In Seattle! Let’s recap, shall we?

Week in Review: The K-1 impresses early

We waited a long time for the Pentax K-1 to arrive. And let’s not even start on how long Pentax shooters have been waiting for full-frame digital. Here at last, the K-1 has already impressed us in the studio. And we don’t have to wonder any longer what the camera’s Pixel Shift mode will be like – so far it’s nothing short of spectacular.

Week in Review: Nikon D500 on the town

Fate smiled upon Seattle last weekend and bestowed us with summer-like weather, which is by no means guaranteed on any day before July 4th around here. The Nikon D500 had already made its way through our preliminary round of studio tests so plenty of shooting out and about was in order for Nikon’s APS-C flagship, and that’s just what happened. 

Week in Review: Canon’s revamped sport shooter arrives

Completing the triple threat is Canon’s update to its full-frame sports shooter, the EOS-1D X II. And with a new 20.2MP sensor, improved 61-point AF system and 14 fps shooting with AF, it is a thing to behold. We’re just getting started and have plenty of fast-action shooting to do with the 1D X II, but for starters we took a look at its performance in our studio tests. In short, we saw a slight dip in high ISO performance compared to its rivals, but the 1D X II shows a marked improvement in dynamic range. Check out the full results for yourself.

Week in Review: Samyang throws an AF curveball

It was a quiet week in terms of new gear but Samyang surprised us with its first ever autofocus lenses: a 50mm F1.4 and 14mm F2.8. They’ll debut for Sony FE and no pricing has been made public yet, but we’re optimistic that this means more AF Samyang lenses are in the works.

Week in Review: Round ’em up

We rounded up the current crop of 1″ sensor long zoom compacts to help make the tough job of picking a camera a little easier. If you want something pocketable or want to shoot for the moon, you’ll find it in this group.

Week in Review: Sony on a winning streak

It’s pretty much a given that every camera maker is selling fewer cameras than they were in the past. Financial reports have tended to follow the same trend of bad news in recent years too, but Sony seems to have found a path through the darkness. In its latest financial year, the company’s imaging division posted some impressive gains in income, even with a decrease in sales.

Until Elon Musk can find a way to get average schmoes like us into orbit, this neat footage from a GoPro on a rocket might be as close as we get. The HERO4 took a ride on UP Aerospace Inc.’s SL-10 rocket and made a quick roundtrip return back to Earth with a NASA-designed capsule. 

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Week in Review: Spring Fever

02 Apr

Week in Review: Spring Fever

There was excitement in the air this week around the office. Was it the unseasonably warm weather? The arrival of a new flagship DSLR? A smattering of product announcements mid-week? It’s hard to say. Whatever it was, it was a week in which Sony supersized its RX10 series, we took a peek at the Nikon D5’s ISO 3 million and learned how to make beer with stinging nettles. Catch up on everything you may have missed in the past seven days.

Week in Review: Spring Fever

The headline of the week goes to the Sony RX10 III announcement, which offers three times the zoom reach of its predecessor, covering a 24-600mm equivalent range. It packs a 20MP 1″-type sensor with 4K/UHD capability, a tilting LCD and a 2.36 million dot EVF in a dust and moisture-resistant body. All of that lens range doesn’t come cheap though – the RX10 III will sell for $ 1500, a $ 200 increase over its predecessor.

On top of the updated superzoom, Sony announced two new full-frame lenses. The business end of the Sony FE 70-300mm F4.5-5.6 is pictured here, and along with it came a 50mm F1.8. If the $ 1000 Zeiss-branded Sony 55mm F1.8 is too rich for your blood, you’ll be thrilled to know that the 50mm F1.8 is a mere $ 250. That’s still more than you’d pay for the Nikon or Canon equivalent, but it’s something, right? Sony let us manhandle their lenses at this week’s press event. You can take a look at some hands-on photos for a closer look and check out some initial sample images.

We see the words ‘I don’t care about video’ expressed fairly often in the comment section, and DPReview writer Richard Butler finds that sentiment a little disheartening. In the spirit of trying something new, the self-professed beginning videographer took the opportunity to test the Sony a6300’s video capabilities to shoot, direct and produce a mini-documentary. The subject is one that’s near and dear to our hearts – craft beer. Find out how a local brewery produces its stinging nettle beer, and see how the Sony a6300 performs.

As parent company Yahoo has fallen on hard times, it looks as though Flickr may be looking for a new home. Yahoo is seeking bids for its web properties, and though it hasn’t said exactly which operations it’s looking to sell off, it would seem that Flickr fits the description. But don’t clear out your savings account just yet – there are a number of reasons why a sale may never happen.

Have you ever wondered what ISO 3 million looks like? Wonder no more. Not only can you see what the Nikon D5’s highest extension ISO setting looks like in our studio, you can take a look at the full range of high ISO settings in their natural environment: a concert venue. We’ve even tested the camera’s dynamic range performance. There’s more to come from the Nikon D5, but for now you can marvel at the highest of high ISO settings.

We sat down with some Nikon executives at CP+ recently. As these things tend to go, we couldn’t pry much information out of them about future plans on the record, but they did confirm some interesting points, including the reason why there’s a D500: you. Years of lobbying for a D300S replacement led directly to the creation of the Nikon D500. It seems that complaining can get you somewhere after all.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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