7.03.2019

Why we rarely see mirrorless cameras of any kind at major events that attract news agencies, photojournalists, sports photographers and guys enslaved by Getty Images.


I don't have all the answers but I do have one notion about why you see so many sports shooters and event shooters working with Canon and Nikon DSLRs instead of the newer generations of Sony, Panasonic, Fuji and Olympus mirrorless cameras. It all comes back to the old saying in politics: "follow the money." The newer the DSLR you see at an event the less likely it is that the photographer holding it does photography as a full time job. He will likely be supplementing his income from part time photography with a full time day job. This gives him a shot at being able to afford the newer cameras. The exceptions are staff photographers from one outlet or another.  When you see sports shooters at events, or contract photographers from Getty Images, at red carpet events you can be certain that they are working for a fraction of the fees that are commanded by photographers who are serving corporate clients directly, and even tinier fractions of the photographers who are servicing national advertising accounts. 

The low fees that websites, contract agencies and magazines currently pay are far below (when adjusted for inflation) the magazine day rates photographers could earn back in the 1960's thru the 1980's. With an average renumeration of between $150 and $250 for a full work day, plus the surrender of all subsidiary rights and copyright to the images, it's almost impossible to consider that people working in this part of the industry have the spending flexibility to change cameras and camera systems very often, if at all. 

If you look closely the next time you are at a sporting event, other than something like the Super Bowl, you'll likely see that the DSLRs and lenses in use are older models and not the cutting edge, newest models. You'll likely see a sprinkling of Nikon D500s and D5s surrounded by a sea of older D3 models and even older cameras. If you surveyed the Canon shooters you'll likely see a few of the near current 1DXxx cameras surrounded by mob of 7D cameras and the like. The longer lenses might be white or gray but they are not going to be the latest release. The reality is that the kinds of photography at which you see cameras from the past are not anywhere near the lucrative other parts of the industry when it comes to monetizing their work and so the practitioners are ill able to afford to make quick switches that might require a financial loss to realize. When the fees are low the camera in your hands is likely to be the one you'll continue to use. And most of the older cameras (older than 2 years) are statistically more likely to be Canon and Nikon DSLRs. Especially in the sports specialty fields. 

And, to be honest, most people who do any profession fit somewhere in a Bell Curve that dictates that a small percentage of an overall group will be risk takers (early adopters) and a very large percentage of the group will fall into the middle of the curve and will be two to three years behind the folks who like to dance along the bleeding edge of technological change. That means that the big hump of people in the middle of the curve have to wait until it's absolutely a proven and confirmed advantage, that has been time tested, before they release their grip on older technology and embrace the newer types of gear. There are always pragmatists that will only shift when they discern an advantage for their own work and, if someone is unchanging in their routine it's unlikely that the cameras with which they practice said routine need to change either. Since 80% (roughly) fall into this category it stands to reason that at least 80% of the cameras being used for public events will belong to that 80% who, by way of analogy, are waiting to see if CDs will actually die off before embracing MP3 music players. And those with an investment in MP3 players who are a bit less conservative are now waiting to see if streaming music is actually a real thing. 

Is it my presumption that the reason for all lack of movement to mirrorless by photographers who shoot public events is a combination of poverty and fear? Not at all. 

Some of the folks you see using newer DSLRs at events are paid staffers for local newspapers, national agencies, or large corporations sponsoring the events. Many times these shooter don't actually shoot with their own gear but are provided gear by their employers. And generally all of these employers have much, much deeper pockets than individual artists. They buy logistically which means they buy in bulk to get better pricing and service and they only buy stuff that integrates into sunk investments already on the ledgers. If they have store rooms of Nikon or Canon lenses the bean counters will make sure no one takes a chance and starts buying camera bodies that don't match up with their prior investments in lenses and accessories. It may be that their buying occurs in five year cycles and they haven't full depreciated, in their minds, the usefulness of the current gear. It will be interesting to see if the next cycle of enterprise camera and lens purchasing will change direction given that the two big past suppliers (C&N) are also moving into mirrorless systems. It's times of evolutionary jumps that deliver disruption in buying patterns ---- as evidenced by millennials shying away from the purchase of personal cars. 

The employee photographer has no incentive to buy new tech out of her own pocket if the employer is providing tools that are at least workable. 

At another level, some practices are predicated on traditions. As video became more and more important fewer people gravitated toward traditional event and sports photographer because the money and opportunities were better in video. The image workers who remained in the field are older that in previous generations, on average. They grew up with Nikon and Canon and learned on the SLRs and DSLRs available when they started out. They are loathe to break what have been, for them, successful habits. If they have the intention to stay the course they have a subconscious disincentive to try other brands because, if they find advantages to the newer tech then they will either be unhappy that they can't swing the finances to sell off their current gear at a loss while fitting out a whole new system in an unfamiliar gear genre or they will have to rationalize their current choices inspire of the new features that mirrorless cameras deliver (silent shooting anyone? Can't imagine someone working on movies sets wanting to work in with a Jacobson blimp instead of a silent shutter Sony or other brand). They will have to learn the process over again if they do jump to the new systems and, while most of us know it's not that daunting, most of us also don't have to live with the financial free fall that may follow if the wrong choices are made. That's the warm fuzziness of doing photography as a hobby instead of trying to put food on the table with your work.

There is another subset of photographers who have the money and the access to affluent clients; who have the ability to move between systems, but can't because the new mirrorless systems don't offer the range of working tools they need in their particular specialities. For example, I have a close friend who is a well known architectural photographer. He grew up shooting 4x5 technical and monorail cameras and for his work he absolutely requires lenses that shift. Tilt/shift lenses. But in the mirrorless universe there isn't a single tilt shift lens currently being offered by any of the mirrorless camera companies. Not a one. My friend could afford to drop $20K or $30K to move to a new system but will not do so until someone with an otherwise compelling feature list joins the Canon and Nikon club and offers a selection of tilt/shift lenses in all the important focal lengths. To do without those lenses would mean changing his entire visual practice and the quality of his deliverables to clients. He encounters the same constraints when moving between medium format systems. 

If you are a well heeled sports photographer who has figured out, through some combination of contracts and sponsorships, how to make real money shooting sports you probably would never consider a company like Fuji for cameras to capture football, soccer and baseball (for examples) and I could not blame you. To date they have one longer lens that would provide competitive performance at just one focal length. It's their 200mm f2.0, and I'm sure it's a magnificent lens. But I'm equally sure that you'd never try to cover a sport that requires continually variable distance between your camera and the action without having a selection of fast, long lenses at your disposal, or at least available to rent.

There are photographers like Joel Grimes, for instance that shoot sports for clients other than editorial  outlets and if they are like their other advertising photographer brethren then they undoubtably make good money doing it. I'm thinking about the folks who shoot the actual advertising images for companies like Nike, Speedo, and Gatorade. Or for ESPN.  They might continue to use Nikon or Canon because they are V.I.P.s in the system they shoot. Their loyalty might be a mix of long experience and nostalgia for their preferred brand but it's equally larded with their ability to call the camera companies' professional services and borrow specialty lenses, loaner bodies, as well as special services. Our perception of the overwhelming presence of DSLRs comes partly because we often see these system V.I.P.s touting their system allegiance in their blogs, interviews and workshops because it's such a powerful synergy for everyone involved. The classic example is Joe McNally and his decades long association with Nikon. I presume that at some point in his digital career (around 2006 to 2012 ? ) Joe could have made one phone call and gotten a crate of Nikon CLS system flashes delivered to his studio with Nikon's blessing and no invoice attached. 

But it was, of course, based on the (realized) perception that Joe would then go out and use the lights on special projects which he would use the images from to push his workshops, books, speaking engagements and pitches for future shooting assignments from other clients. His most over the top use of Nikon gear was the employment of many Nikon speed lights to overpower the desert sun in Dubai while photographing attractive models. A stunt that was covered by the photo industry press at large with almost as much interest and intensity as a moon landing. Joe worked on his brand in the process while Nikon got coverage of their differentiating product portfolio (arguably the best flash system at the time) worth millions of dollars ---- all for delivering a couple dozen flashes to a mad man in the desert. To do a stunt that most of us realized could be equalled by one powerful flash system from Elinchrom  at a far lower overall cost. Well played by Joe and Nikon if you ask me...

So, if mirrorless really is popular at all then why don't you see it everywhere? Hmmm. Mirrorless camera systems, until recently, were not as capable when it came to working with fast, continously moving subjects that needed to be captured in sharp focus. Phase detect AF was the secret weapon that allowed traditional DSLRs to hold onto various areas of the industry. The other secret weapon was the ability to shoot fast with minimal finder blackout. This meant that users of mirrorless cameras were buying  them not for sports and spot news (the bulk of situations where the general public is treated to the sight of professionals work with cameras) but for studio work, considered work, portraits, landscapes and all manner of subject that didn't require the complex focusing capabilities for subjects on the run.

When you consider where most considered photography happens you realize that it is used for just about everything from weddings to corporate executive portraits to nearly all advertising. I'll take advertising as an example as it's the part of the industry with which I am most familiar. Last Fall I spent nearly six weeks flying around the country making advertising portraits for an insanely large construction and infrastructure company. In every location and every situation we were balancing light with the sun or with ambient daylight of one kind or another. We were also making compositions that juxtaposed interesting backgrounds with our portrait subjects. This meant that I was putting up light stands with their attendant sand bags. The light stands held battery powered mono-lights powerful enough to provide enough exposure to match full sun. Even with a modifier in front of the light source. The composition was careful and exact and the lighting position critical so the super fast autofocusing was not required, in fact, some of the images I preferred manually focusing to get the plane of focus exactly where I wanted it. Having a camera with an EVF was more critical to me. 

In fact, in most of my jobs it's the same idea. A system with a good feedback system (pre-chimping) holds value for me while a super fast frame rate or super fast focusing is more or less meaningless; after having reached a level of sufficiency for the work I do. 

And, for most shooters, the differential between focusing speed and accuracy sets up its own value matrix which is subject to the operators' needs or preferences. I would rather every focusing engagement favor accuracy over speed. With portraits the accuracy of a good eye detect AF feature is priceless.

So, for every public event photographer you see who is sporting the older DSLR tech there is likely at least a one to one ratio of other photographers whose work prioritizes other camera strengths. For a long while Panasonic was my top choice because their implementation of video was so much better than their competitors. Now others are catching up (see the Fuji X-T3).  My current happiness with Fuji is that their files, straight out of camera, make for better theater images and better portrait --- at least to my color taste. But for a lot of work out on location the benefits of industry leading image stabilization from Olympus and Panasonic may be of much greater importance.

Look in the small backpack of travel photographers like James Popsys and chances are you'll be much more likely to find smaller format mirrorless systems because they deliver great files while also helping to meet the vagaries of airline restrictions as well as being comfortable enough to carry and shoot with all day long. Gone are the days when the full frame cameras were the first choice for travel. They left along with the last couple inches of airline seat width and the implementation of extra baggage charges. 

The bottom line is that change comes at a snail's pace even when most of the users of a technology understand the advantages of the newer systems. It's the reason city only commuters continue to buy big SUVs to drive to work and to leave parked all day in sun baked parking lots only to drive back home through traffic over the same 15 average miles and the 45 minutes it takes instead of investing in hybrid or all electric cars. Even though they'd save hundreds or even thousands of dollars on gas.

So, the next time you are punishing yourself by watching sports on TV and you find yourself searching the on screen shots of the photo media for what kind of cameras they might be using remember that this cohort of photographers is very small and very specialized and, if you are at all like me, they don't shoot the same way we do or for the same targets. Then take a moment to realize that life is happening all around you while you are watching someone else do something healthy on TV and that your are also shortchanging our own ability to decide your own camera choices by making unequal comparisons with low paid sports workers. Turn the stupid TV off and either grab the camera you carefully researched and enjoy using and head outside, or get those walking shoes all warmed up and ready for action.

Nothing good comes from watching television. And, as Karl Marx once said, "Televised Sports is the opiate of the masses." 



We don't all drag desktop computers with us all over town anymore....
Not the we ever did

usually all the lighting gear is much more important than which type of camera you will use to get the shot. Imagination and experience being the two most important parameters.

Lighting trumps cameras. Sandbags make us safe.

Big equipment is not agile. Or fun to drive.
My old Mamiya Six had no motor, no autofocus and no zoom lenses. I actually had to think about making photographs. 


Contax G2 with the 21mm lens. Mirrorless? You bet.

Sharks move constantly or they die. 
I'd rather be a shark than dead.

15 comments:

Wolfgang Lonien said...

Aaahh, the two girls (models?) on the Roman stairs - one of my favourite photos from you ever! So beautiful, and you must have been within their age group as well, right? So cool, like memories of my own past (in Cologne, couldn't afford Rome at that time)...

Gary said...

Or it may be that photographers using DSLRs (still the majority of real camera users) like what DSLRs can do for them. This post strikes me as evangelistic; Why, oh Lord, haven't they seen the light? The devil in his many guises has confounded them.

Marvin G. Van Drunen said...

Hi Kirk. Great post. Regarding the use of traditional DSLRs in sports: During the last Olympics I saw an interesting article about the support Canon was offering its professional shooters. The article included photos of the storage room Canon had open to its professional users which contained racks filled with multiple numbers of every lens in the Canon inventory which were available for use at no charge. I'm betting that in 2016 Fuji or Olympus had nothing like that. Maybe they will in 2020 but I doubt it because the long lenses you mentioned are still not available.

The other area I've just been reading about concerns the press photographers covering the White House. I watched a great 4 part documentary by National Geographic about Pete Souza, President Obama's official photographer. The noise of the shutters when the entire group of photographers are working actually drowns out the voices of the people being photographed. I then found an article in the Washington Post entitled "Is the sound of clicking cameras at the White House nearing extinction ..." predicting a move to mirrorless. The times are a-changin'.

Marvin Van Drunen

Robert Roaldi said...

That's some serious lighting equipment on the backs of those trucks.

Eric Rose said...

One of the most celebrated still working PJ's today, David Burnett has switched over from Canon to Sony. I would imagine he gets his Sony equipment gratis as it seems that's the way it's done these days.

I have a buddy who is a Nikon Ambassador. Nikon has given him both of the new Z cameras and all the glass that goes along with them. He likes his Panasonic GH5 better for video. I almost bought his GH5 but in the end he couldn't part with it. KEH eventually got my hard earned Canadian pesos for a GH5.

When I did newspaper work all my gear was provided. Mind you that was back in the 70's and 80's. These days the papers don't even provide free coffee from what I hear. A lot of the remaining staff photographers hang out at The CameraStore here in Calgary because they get free wifi and more importantly free coffee.

One of my last pro gigs was doing an annual report for the neurology department of a local hospital. When I was doing the head shots almost every doc that came in had to mention he had a newer and better camera than I did. Like you say those making a living at photography for the most part are not early adopters. Just doesn't make good business sense, at least not in our small market.

Eric

Neil Swanson said...

Up until fall of 2018 my ONLY digital camera, the only camera besides a phone I had at my disposal was a Nikon D3. I'd go off on to jobs and music festivals and shows with one body, no backup. Not smart but thats the way it was.

Now in my working past there was lots of cameras in many formats. Life changes sold all that off and as soon as I had a FF DSLR Nikon in my hand I had to have one. A friend and NYT shooter had a D2H. Loved it and bought a used one, then a D2HS. My wife and I did a book (shot with a D200) and that bought a D3 the day they were released. My yardstick has always been the responsiveness of a large heavy Pro DSLR. The D3 is now worth a good dinner out, maybe half a riding lawnmower but it still delivers. Last fall I got a bug up my ass that I had to move up the food chain. I rented a D4S. It really is a good leap from the D3 so I found a low mile used body and bought it.

My friends who still shoot for newspapers are using D4's if they are lucky and have been for a decade+ with older lenses as Kirk points out. It was always that way though. I'd string for papers in the late '70s/80 and some of the other stringers had Nikon F4/5 bodies while the staff guys had hammered F2 bodies. I'll have this D4S for a long time till it too is worth a lawnmower.

In the photo pit as music festivals its all Nikon/Canon with a spattering of Sony cameras the "kids" bring in. That's my observation anyway. Pit ages range from 20-60+ and the camera follow. iPhones do a stupid good job too.

I'm trying and loving the Xpro2 more seriously this time around. I have decades of M cameras and film use behind me and yet I find the EVF is what I use the most unlike Kirk. It may be that since it is my first EVF outing I'm just marveling in the use and convenience. Kirk has years of EVF and so the OVF is like going back.

No the Xpro2 isn't and can't replace a DSLR, but it can. Last weekend I had a blast doing nice B&W images of people w/o a big camera over my shoulder. Could have been the Nikon but it was the Xpro. The images are wonderful (Acros) and I missed focus on five of @180 frames? Not bad for semi action. I hate to say it but the Fuji Acros really is "filmy".

A month ago I took both cameras to a shoot in a very dark recording studio. The Fuji was ideal with just a 35 and 50 Fuji'crons.
It was quiet and stealthy. ISO 3200 images look pretty good. But the cover for a CD will be a Nikon frame, 85mm, handheld ISO 12,800 shot that is as clean as the Fuji at 3200. One light, probably a 40w bulb in a hanging IKEA paper globe. Some other Fuji shots trumped the Nikon shot. The Nikon on quiet mode is really good and I only hit the shutter on the 2 and the 4 during recording if you know what I mean.

I no longer shoot for a living, I'm sure not well heeled. 75% of my Nikon lenses are the screw AF, not AFS. Old shit. I'm OK with that but I want to try to keep a toe in the new shit. A friend just got an XT30. I should try that as it is the real guts of an XT3 in a different body.

It is really what you shoot not what you shoot with. Nobody ever mentions a 2007 era DSLR when they look at images. I NEED to pay as much attention to that as anyone.

D Lobato said...

I use two full frame mirrorless cameras, but my perception is that DSLR's from Nikon and Canon still have the best advanced on camera flash systems. For wedding shooters that is a necessity. Would also be advantageous for many paying jobs as well. I rarely use my dedicated camera flash but occasionally it's useful, especially with bounce flash. I shoot live jazz music but don't receive income from it.

Michael Ferron said...

More answer than I expected and thank you. Do understand I am not much of a TV or sports person but was just commenting on the cameras I have seen the media using.

Kirk, Photographer/Writer said...

Hi Micheal, I didn't mean to imply that you suffer from TV mania just that so many people on the web reference the cameras they see in televised sporting matches that I wanted to address that as well. I can't stand TV programming around sports. If I were the next dictator of America I would make the gushy broadcasting of sports illegal. The only exception would be the swim competitions every four years at the Olympics. Certainly never golf, football or tennis. And if one watches baseball on TV that person is probably well beyond redemption...

HR said...

I think the thing about them all using DSLRs is exactly the same with everyone using Apple computers.

Kirk, Photographer/Writer said...

So HR, let me get this right. You're saying all the DSLRs are beautifully designed and function absolutely perfectly? And return amazing shareholder value? Like Apple computer?

Which cameras are those? I'd like to buy one.

Anonymous said...

A few things.
Eye level optical finders work better in the dark for some of us. No lights to ruin our night vision and no rear screen viewing(turned off) so we are not spotlighted in the crowd.
Then, when shooting for papers or AP in the past could use Pool lenses. Big, fast AF Glass we individual shooters could seldom afford.
Biggest deal with 300-500 day rate for magazines in the early 1970's. For many it is not that high now. Not for "Content" produced by "Content Providers" who often give up all rights. As you have noted.
A few decades back we had the groupie types who would give away work for a credit line and no pay. Problem was, with film it got expensive fast. Add in sideline or event access and credential problems for those not able to produce actual assignment confirmation and the sidelines were not all that crowded. You shot film - Chromes or B&W. If affiliated with one of the Biggies you got to plug into the Ceiling strobes and shoot Kodachrome 25. If not you shot available light and cursed the ceiling strobes when they wiped out your shot.
Now too many excellent photo editors are retired and publications are more "get a picture - anything will do" rather than "hire a pro who can produce on time, on target and in budget". Part of it is that they have to pay the Pro while "anything will do" is often free for access credentials. So we see a Canon Rebel on the sidelines of NBA and NFL games alongside Robert Hanashiro and his top level Nikon gear for USA today.

Part of the working pro is, as you know - familiarity and comfortable handling. An older generation body you know well balancing a 600 f/4 on the sidelines of NFL and MLB games makes for excellent results. A newer body similarly equipped, but one you are not comfortable with means more missed shots - even with "spray and pray" 12+ frames per second. Covering a team for the club meant shooting 30+ rolls a game, NFL or MLB. A few less for NBA. Trying to get every player in action for the team publication and promotion images meant shoot, shoot everyone possible and get them in action - faces visible most of the time.

It was and is easier to do with gear that you are in tune with. New slows things down til you get comfortable and... staying with the system that gives you access to the lens selection helps a lot. Yes, newer is often "better" on a technical level. Can you see it in a double truck spread in SI?

crsantin said...

Hi Kirk. I was at a Canada Day event on July 1. Big event, many thousands of people in attendance. Beautiful weather. Lots of pictures being taken, many in fact. So many that my wife commented on it and she is not into photography (she is amused by my fascination with it and happily supports me though). I didn't see a single DSLR nor a single mirrorless camera. Not one. I didn't bring one either as I chose to use my iPhone and you know what? I'm rather happy with the images and videos I took with my phone. I bought a grip that lets me hold the phone like a camera and it was a joy to use, very liberating. I think I'll be using my iPhone more and more.

As far as watching television goes, I gave that up years ago. I still watch tennis when I can but that's about it. I might turn it on for two minutes to check the weather and get a local news update but I often go for many days or weeks even without going near my television. I find my quality of life has improved. I used to watch tv every night. My dad always called it the idiot box and he was right.

Mitch said...

Reiterating some points I made about this on another post, and some new items, posted from the perspective of a former full time staff photojournalist:

The vast majority of us don't make more than 40K a year.

Some of us have to buy our own equipment. And can't afford to change.

Newsrooms that supply equipment are rare and do so at the umbrage of the financial types in the company who see newsrooms as money wasting vanity projects. So changing/getting new stuff is rare.

"Agency" photographers are often working on spec, so in the same boat as regular staffers. Some agency shooters are on staff (very few) and do get better support.

Nikon and Canon developed a very strong Professional Services division. This includes perks to even little guys like me such as: lightning fast repairs, loaning me stuff because I felt like playing with it,loaning me stuff because I was covering a big assignment, loaning me stuff when mine broke and was in for repair. This support kept us locked in. Newer manufacturers got a fast reputation out of the gate for poor support and nonexistent repairs. So none of us switched.

Workflows are pretty finely tuned. Switching brands would switch up workflows, which is a big commitment.

Shutter noise ... bullshit ... most of the time. Big time politicians and celebrities limit access. First it makes them look like they are in demand and in control. Second it makes the press look "rabid", further enhancing their perceived power and further denigrating the press. I have been involved in national political events and visits and often I was corralled with limited view of a fraction of the proceedings so hammering away was essential. Or in the case of the White House, friends who have covered it say a lot of the situations you are in involve being herded in somewhere then forcibly herded back out again after 45 seconds. Maybe 90 seconds. So it's spray and pray.

David Burnett switched. Great. There are about 6 people nationally operating at his level and as he goes does not indicate superior insight. He has the luxury of choosing what works for him. Like shooting the Olympics on Speed Graphics a few times... The rest of us aren't in that league.

Terence Morrissey said...

Two years ago my wife hired a professional photographer to photograph our one year old daughter.
He arrived with a Nikon D200, nevertheless the photographs were very good.