4.23.2019

I had lunch with a photographer friend yesterday. He collects point and shots and compact cameras of all kinds. Now I'm retracing my steps back to a Canon G10.

A Canon G10 shot from one of my books. 

Every time I have lunch with a photographer friend it seems to cost me money. Yesterday I had lunch with Andy; he's a really good street, twilight, urban landscape and people photographer and he's fun to talk with because he's also whip smart about most technical issues surrounding cameras and the making of images. Over the years he's owned a number of "normal" cameras, the latest (which he still owns but rarely uses) is a Canon 6D and an assortment of Canon lenses, but whenever I see him out on the street, in a coffee shop or at a pop up bar at SXSW he's generally sporting smaller, more agile and less conspicuous cameras. Small Olympus cameras like the EPL-1 or the XZ-1. He's also got current Olympus cameras like the Pen-F and he seems to love that particular camera line. Yesterday at lunch he had, his iPhone, a DXO One camera, an XZ-1 and his Olympus Pen-F with the Leica/Panasonic 25mm f1.4. He also had his newly published book of photographs from his recent trip to India; but I'll review that shortly (spoiler: great little book). 

As Andy and I sat at Maudie's Tex-Mex Restaurant, eating queso, tacos and chicken tortilla soup we spent nearly three hours discussing photography, the thrill of travel and shooting, and also the bliss of making great photographs within ten miles of home. When conversation turned to small cameras I was reminded of what was one of my favorite powerful little compacts, the Canon G10. It had a 14 megapixel sensor that was smaller than today's Sony 1 inch sensor but it was a delightful camera to work with in good light. The files were nice and detailed (see above) and the operation of the camera was clean and straightforward. 

Interesting (at least to me) is that back in the middle ages of digital cameras, around 2009, I had a series of discussions with another friend who was totally invested in the idea that the only truly "professional" tools at the time were full frame cameras (35mm format) and that no publisher, ad agency or other client would ever use images from a "lesser" camera. Being the contrarian I am I bet my friend that I could illustrate at least half to three quarters of the product shots in a book I was doing about lighting equipment with a small point and shoot camera. I further stated that the images would print well, and that the publisher wouldn't care at all about the provenance of the images as long as they looked good in the final scans. It was probably a bit of hubris on my part but I'd been using the little Canon G10 for well over a year by that point and was pretty certain that the combination of low ISO's, my good friend Mr. Tripod and some added light would help me make files that could go toe to toe with files from bigger cameras; at least in the sizes that would be used in the printed book. 

the cover of this book was shot with a larger format camera.
Either an APS-C or full frame Canon or Nikon. 

I needed to illustrate a lot of products for this book and I worked pretty carefully. I made sure to get the white balances correct and I was careful to never over expose or under expose. I was especially careful to put the camera on a tripod and to shoot near the maximum aperture of the lens. I was going to get more than enough depth of field because of the small sensor size but I didn't want to give up any sharpness to diffraction, which would make itself known in at any setting over f5.6. It was funny to see a tiny point and shoot camera riding up on the top of a 500 Series Gitzo Studex tripod with a pan head at least five times bigger than the camera but I didn't lose any shots to vibration or camera movement. 

In the end about 90% of the images in the book, which are of the actual gear or products, were done with the G10 (all of the example images; portfolio stuff, were done through the years with any number of other cameras). While the book had a smaller audience that my "Minimalist Photographer" books (Location and Studio) it still sold well and turned a profit for me and the publisher. I won my bet. 

After that I went down some other gear-madness rabbit hole, sold off the smaller cameras, and turned my attention to interchangeable lens camera systems for a long time. But my chat over lunch with Andy reminded me of how much I enjoyed using those smaller cameras and so I'm now on a search for a super clean, low mileage G10. 

Even crazier is that I mentioned this to one of my other good, photographer friends over coffee this morning and he mentioned that he has... in his endless stash of cameras, exactly the camera I am looking for. I'll relieve him of it as soon as I can and spend some time getting reacquainted with a camera that doesn't feel like it has to prove anything. 

Strange how some of our favorite cameras  are those that we used and got rid of in years past only to reacquaint ourselves with them in the present. After going through my renewed desire for the G10 I also came across a long diary entry about my photographic road trip to west Texas in 2010. This led me to dig up the images from that trip; which I think are very good. The cameras I was using then were the Olympus EP-2 cameras, and a combination of the new micro four thirds lenses they were just starting to make in earnest for those cameras, as well as some adapted Olympus Pen FT lenses from the early 1970's. Now I'm on a search for one of those cameras as well. This time I can gloat a bit because I've never gotten rid of the older, manual focusing Olympus lenses, and I even have two time proven lens adapters just waiting for them. 

Must be rampant nostalgia for the "good old days" of digital. You know, back in 2010. 

Well, that's all for now. I need to make sure I've got a couple of X-H1s with charged batteries packed. I'm just about out the door for this evening's theater shoot. Wish me luck....

12 comments:

Mike Shwarts said...

I have a Canon G15. And after using the wifi in an Olympus E-M10 and a Sony A6000, I bought an EZ Share wifi card for the little Canon and a Panasonic GF2. Carrying a small camera plus phone for uploading and sharing images is my idea of mobile photography. Just add Photoshop Express or another editing app and I feel I'm still ahead of the latest phones in image quality. And I certainly have features in the little cameras that a phone does not have including ease and pleasure of use.

Gato said...

I think my "Powershot" was a G9, but I too have some fond memories and a number of nice photos in my files. The little camera made some very nice photos, never drew much attention, and (barely) fit into the back pocket ofmy jeand. (Had to remember not to sit down.)

Something like Mike Shwarts describes above sounds to me like a sweet setup.

MikeR said...

I think I've said it before: clamp your old smartphone, mount clamp to a tripod, use a selfie release cable, and get ready to be amazed at what a crappy smartphone camera can do.

On a contrarian note: I entered M43rds with a Lumix GF1 and an Olympus E-PL1. Sold the Olympus after a couple years, because the menu system made me crazy. Recently found myself missing it, so I bought another on eBay ... and wondered what there was to miss, so after a few months, re-sold it.

John Lambert Gordon said...

Hi Kirk, Given your current use of Fuji kit I think you would have fun with an X30, if you can find one. Beautifully made p&s with a larger sensor (2/3 in) than the G10, X-trans processor with Fuji film sims, EVF instead of tunnel OVF and an excellent manual zoom. In my "good old days" I did travel photography with a Nikon P7000 and a Fujifilm XF1 and loved the convenience and portability of each. Cheers!

atmtx said...

Small cameras are unassuming and fantastic under the right conditions. You can also shoot in places that bigger cameras attract attention and alter the mood of the picture. Great lunch, Kirk. It was so fun to talk about photography, gear and life.

Kristian Wannebo said...

Also I enjoyed my Fuji XF1 (good to ISO 400, useable at 800, good IS). 12 Mp (6.6x8.8mm), or half the pixels differently exposed to give a good 6 Mp HDR in one exposure. I made a folding screen loupe for it to compensate for the missing viewfinder, it was then still thinner than 4cm (1.6"). It was always in my pocket for three years - until the shutter gave up.

Alun J. Carr said...

I had a Canon PowerShot G9, together with the wide and tele lens adaptors, and it was a beautiful camera. I kept the aluminium Lensmate around the lens most of the time, thereby protecting the lens from knocks, but also providing more purchase for the left hand when shooting; similarly, I'd attached a Richard Franiec grip to give my right hand better purchase. The two Canon Lens adaptors also had Lensmate aluminium tubes attached to their rears, so a lens chance was as fast as a DSLR. I replaced the G9 with an S90 (same sensor size; also with a Franiec grip), which unfortunately enforced the "dirty diaper" hold of the camera (though I was sort-of accustomed to it with the G9 because of the wildly-inaccurate viewfinder, and necessity when using the lens adaptors), and the S90 was replaced with an S110. Recently, I replaced the S110 with a Panasonic TZ100/ZS100, bought used shortly after the TZ200/ZS200, when the price collapsed. The TZ100 is a bit bulkier than I like, but it gives me (i) an EVF (albeit tiny) and (ii) a 1" sensor (a TZ70/ZS50 isn't *that* much smaller, and has a tiny sensor, albeit with a monster zoom lens); if, 30 years ago, someone had told me that I could have a camera that I could hold in the palm of my hand, and fit in a belt pouch, with an crazy 25-250 mm-e zoom lens, and image quality better than my Olympus OM-1n loaded with Tri-X, I would have said that they were delusional. We fixate on how digital cameras compare to one another at 100% pixel-peeping levels, neglecting to compare with the best camera/film combinations at the start of the digital era; combinations that we thought were the bees' knees. Think about a 1" sensor image converted to B&W at ISO 800 (especially with DxO PRIME noise reduction) compared to 35 mm full-frame Tri-X pushed to 800 ASA using M&B Promicrol or Paterson Accuspeed (rather British developer choices, I'm afraid): the 1" sensor wins hands down, as it does at every other ISO setting and its film equivalent, and yet we deemed those 35 mm images perfectly acceptable; sometimes a bit noisy, yes, but in B&W that *added* to the character of the image rather than detracting from it (at least until you'd pushed Tri-X to 1600 ASA and had grain like golfballs); we have become obsessed with smooth, utterly noise-free images, and lenses razor-sharp in the corners, even though most of the time the subject is in the middle 2/3 of the frame. Apologies for this extended rant, but it's been building for a long time. Oh, and the TZ100 isn't my only "proper" camera: I have a Sony RX10iii which has the same sensor size, bigger zoom range, and probably sharper optics; and a Pentax K-5 with three Limited primes and a few manual-focus Pentax-A primes, though my favourite portrait lens is a K-mount Soviet Helios-44K-4 2/58 (90 mm-e), even though it requires stop-down metering (green button): it draws images, especially in B&W, in a way that modern lenses do not.

Fred said...

Five or six years ago I was working at the admission gate for a car show and noticed that the person buying the ticket at the moment had one of the Canon G series cameras. I asked him how he liked it and he said that he was a professional photographer who used DSLRs for work but preferred the small camera for his personal photography.
I still have the Canon A610 that I got in the long dim past and every once in a while I put new AA batteries in it and pop it in a jacket pocket. At 5MP it may not be as "good" as my iphone but I can operate it with one hand while holding onto the dog's leash with the other hand and in this world of online imagery the picture quality is just as adequate as it was a few years back.

HR said...

I have had the Canon G16 since 2014 and before that I had the Canon G15. Two wonderful cameras! Of course, I owned other cameras also, but I liked to have the G16/G15 with me all the time. Earlier this year I bought a Panasonic TX1 (the name in Japan, elsewhere it is ZS100, TZ100, etc.) and I finally found a wonderful replacement for my G16. I still have the G16 though and occasionally take it out. I have no plans to sell it. Here is my user review of the Panasonic ZS100/TZ100/TX1:

https://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/62337549

And is a thread I started about the Canon G16:

https://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/54568251

dinksdad said...

I scored a nice Canon G12 at our local flea market for $40. It joins my Pentax MX-1 and Samsung EX2F for occasional photo snapping. Of all these compact cameras from days past I prefer the Olympus Stylus 1 for its extended zoom range, intuitive controls, and built-in EVF.

Anonymous said...

Small cameras are cool.

Looking forward to seeing the pics.

Mark

dwross said...

Lovely (and fun!) I think the CCD sensors have some kind of secret sauce thing going on. I've recently rediscovered my Canon S95. It makes great files, and it's truly pocket-sized. I do think the improvements in Lightroom, Photoshop, etc. make a difference in what can be done with the Raw material. I love what I'm seeing in the images with just a bit of post play.