We've seen a progressive shift from film to digital. What do you all think of another shift from DSLR to mirrorless interchangeable lens? Or even more radical, a shift to "frame grabbing" mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras?
RioSundoro Member 215 posts Joined Mar 2009 More info | Nov 26, 2009 08:22 | #1 |
JeffreyG "my bits and pieces are all hard" More info | Nov 26, 2009 09:09 | #2 Rio Sundoro wrote in post #9085563 We've seen a progressive shift from film to digital. What do you all think of another shift from DSLR to mirrorless interchangeable lens? I can see this primarily taking over the range currently covered by cameras like the Rebel line and Nikon's D40/D60/D90. These are consumer cameras where people are looking for good IQ. These are the people that are most likely to put up with composition by LCD or EVF in trade for keeping that good IQ and getting a smaller rig. Or even more radical, a shift to "frame grabbing" mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras? Too much work if you are just grabbing frames from a continuous video loop. I don't want to wade through tons of footage looking for potential stills. Also, I do not shoot video and stills the same way. Any event that I shot with the intention of making stills would make for useless video. My personal stuff:http://www.flickr.com/photos/jngirbach/sets/
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birdfromboat Goldmember 1,839 posts Likes: 1 Joined Mar 2008 Location: somewhere in Oregon trying to keep this laptop dry More info | Nov 26, 2009 09:38 | #3 there is work being done right now that could lead to a kind of photon recepter array woven into a fabric. I heard a report on NPR about it, but unfortunately ( fortunately?) I was interrupted in the middle of the segment by a large fish and didn't get enough to really comment on it here. The basic idea is a fabric that looks around and finds the predominent hue and then mimics it. how long before we can capture images with a handkerchief for tenthousand dollars, followed shortly by baseball caps for twenty bucks? The entirety of human experience could end up on a memory chip somewhere, someday. 5D, 10D, G10, the required 100 macro, 24-70, 70-200 f/2.8, 300 f2.8)
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joedlh Cream of the Crop 5,515 posts Gallery: 52 photos Likes: 688 Joined Dec 2007 Location: Long Island, NY, N. America, Sol III, Orion Spur, Milky Way, Local Group, Virgo Cluster, Laniakea. More info | Nov 26, 2009 09:50 | #4 By a mirrorless, do you mean one where you use the LCD for composing your shots, or like some cameras, where the viewfinder is an LCD? This might work for video, although I am by no means a videographer. However, the stability advantage to holding the camera up to one's eye cannot be ignored. Did you ever try holding at arm's length a camera with an 80-200mm f/2.8 while you composed the shot on the LCD? To be sure, an LCD viewfinder would address this problem. However, the one camera that I tried with this feature was not encouraging. The viewfinder image was jumpy, had insufficient resolution, and did not accurately present tonality of the scene. Joe
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Wilt Reader's Digest Condensed version of War and Peace [POTN Vol 1] More info | Nov 26, 2009 14:04 | #5 The Olympus Pen-like digital camera was interesting until I learned it had no viewfinder! I don't want the stability issues that arise then your elbows are not braced against your chest, but held out in the air in front of you. And LCD technology is insuffient for in-viewfinder electronic display rather than ground glass. And the pellicle design pioneered and re-introduced -- over and over and over -- by Canon over the decades loses light to the film/sensor and introduces surfaces to have dust land on in the light path to the sensor. Maybe one day it might be a reality for mirrorless, but right now still too fraught with shortcomings. You need to give me OK to edit your image and repost! Keep POTN alive and well with member support https://photography-on-the.net/forum/donate.php
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Brikwall Senior Member 840 posts Likes: 1 Joined Apr 2007 Location: Atlantic Canada More info | Nov 26, 2009 14:17 | #6 I'm simply going to avoid all these technological paradigm shifts by reverting to film... Dan
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DStanic Cream of the Crop 6,148 posts Likes: 7 Joined Oct 2007 Location: Canada More info | Nov 26, 2009 17:10 | #7 Rio Sundoro wrote in post #9085563 Or even more radical, a shift to "frame grabbing" mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras?
Sony A6000, 16-50PZ, 55-210, 35mm 1.8 OSS
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gingerpaul Member 32 posts Joined Nov 2007 Location: East Berkshire, England More info | Nov 26, 2009 17:32 | #8 I've just got a Panasonic GF1 and I think that this style of camera will make a big impact over the next few years. Suddenly there are cameras that (just) fit in a jacket pocket that take decent pictures. I'm looking forward to seeing where the technology takes us.
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Nov 26, 2009 22:18 | #9 DStanic wrote in post #9087653 Have you ever seen stills taken from 5Dmk2 video? they don't look bad at all... Isn't it actually the idea behind Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1's stunning claim of 60 frames per second?
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sparkin Cream of the Crop 6,522 posts Likes: 14 Joined Nov 2006 Location: Lex, Ky More info | Nov 26, 2009 22:22 | #10 birdfromboat wrote in post #9085855 ... interrupted in the middle of the segment by a large fish ... I intend to use this as an excuse to escape the next Faculty meeting at work.
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