3.14.2020

I'm on a waiting list for the Sigma LCD magnifier for the Sigma fp. I may have just saved $250 by buying something else.


The more astute among you may have noticed that I have fallen in love with the Sigma fp camera as a personal/art camera not the least because it's so damn eccentric. It adds friction to everything I shoot with its funky operating methodologies and also because of its lack of a feature I used to think of as "mandatory on any modern camera" an eye level viewing function. EVF or OVF (but preferably the EVF so I can learn as I go...).

The fp is a little brick of a camera and it has NO frills (unless you consider 12 bit DNG raw video as a frill). It has only the immovable screen on the back of the camera for you to use when composing or evaluating an image. Absolutely basic point-and-shoot primitive. (It largely makes up for any shortcomings with a perfect sensor and a enervatingly good selection of shooting menu color tweaks).

The list of accessories for the camera includes a big, bulky and supposedly solidly constructed loupe which fits over the rear screen but doesn't occlude the control buttons. It's supposed to screw into the tripod socket and be of stout and heartwarmingly resolute construction. But I've never seen one in the flesh and I'm beginning to believe that it does not exist. That it is vaporware meant to entice less cautious photographers into a system that may not exist as a complete ecosystem.

Much as I love the camera and make excuses for any of its shortcomings I am becoming a bit disconsolate at the lack of support from its maker. While the rear screen, in its naked glory, is just fine for indoor photography it, like just about any screen exposed to the brilliance of the sun, is dreadfully painful to use in bright, exterior light. I've tried to cobble together a substitute for the $300 Sigma accessory by using rubber bands and a Hoodman loupe but it kept falling off, hitting my shoes and randomly diminishing the effect of my rigorous shoe polishing (a different story altogether).

I was about to go to a priest and ask for advanced absolution for the vigorous and profane venting of spleen directly to the poor, hapless people of Sigma when I remembered that I am not catholic and I don't have the contact information for any one of any influence at all at Sigma. I also remembered that real absolution in this time of fear and anxiety might be difficult to obtain with any real assurance. Especially for something as petty as excoriating Japanese manufacturers over their inability to get me a gadget. One I don't even need for my real work.

But then, one evening when lightning played like distorted shafts of sun off a chaotic mirrored ball puncturing the black of night, and thunder scared all the woodland animals so badly they decamped and moved to Oklahoma, I happened upon a product on a site called Amazon.com and it seemed like exactly what I needed only fashioned out of lesser materials and promising a lesser result. But it was only something like $50 and I knew I could send it back if it turned out to be so tawdry that using it would imperil my singular vision of the world. It was the Movo Loupe and included in the description was the "promise" that it would fit on the Sigma fp.

It arrived two days later. We had, by then, emerged from the root cellar that serves as our redoubt in intense storms, and were ready to brave shooting in full sun once more. I rushed to the Amazon locker that held my newest treasure safe. I pieced the unit together and attached it to the camera.

At first I was sadder than Persephone on her endless returns to Hades. While the unit fit just fine and covered the screen but not the controls, the image through the ocular, even after adjusting the diopter to its maximum was soft and gauzy. What a disappointment!!

But as I was driving my new Tesla X at 98 mph Subaru Forester at 15 mph in the parking lot of the bank (location of the lockers) I looked down and noticed that the lens closest to my eye when using the finder still had on it a protective film of plastic. I removed it and the view improved---but not enough to make me happy... yet. 

Later, when I used the hinge on the loupe to raise up the eyepiece up towards the heavens and look directly at the screen ( nicely shielded by the loupe's remaining surround) I happened to see something I hadn't noticed before. The inside element, the one closest to the screen, also had a plastic film covering it as a protective measure. Once I removed that film the loupe started to perform remarkably well for such an inexpensive product. 

Now I can say that I am happy with the Movo loupe and can give it a resounding recommendation (as long as you incorporate the  low cost into your matrix of points of satisfaction). While the Sigma loupe might be engineered out of better materials (the Movo is polycarbonate....) we may never know because, in fact, we may never have the opportunity to see one in the wild. It may be the "Ghost Leopard" of the photographic industry. 

And that's my review. Don't like it? Sorry, go read about Ctein's Tesla X instead. You'll be back....


14 comments:

MikeR said...

Many smiles for this one. Looks like you have a way to keep your mind active. I.e., this blog.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for having a return of the humor we have come to know and love!

Yes, that ode to the Tesla X at only $100k was a bar too far. I don't know what Mike has been smoking, but this (and his defense of it) was one of the most ill-timed pieces I have ever seen. Now if it had been the SL2, that's another matter.

Stay safe,

Rick

Ray said...

I'm not a stute. Don't call me those horrible names. I don't even know what a stute is, but I assure you I'm not one. Back off dude.

Kirk, Photographer/Writer said...

🙃

Kurt Friis Hansen said...

Smile.

Welcome back to the living.

Here’s a quote from my preferred guru, Tom Lehrer:

“Life is like a sewer. What you get out of it, depends on what you put into it”.



Mike Mundy said...

"Enervatingly good."

??

Michael Matthews said...

You're definitely onto something. More than a year ago I picked up a $40 Movo mini-pseudo-shotgun mic for video use. It works. I wouldn't record the San Francisco Symphony with it, but nobody's asking me to. Caleb Pike recommended it as a budget alternative.

Richard Parkin said...

That thing about removing the plastic film is mentioned as non-obvious in the Amazon reviews so you are not alone.

Anonymous said...

Ctein drives a Tesla. Tuan of Large Format 5x7 National Park images drieves a Toyota Prius.
If he were still around - what would Ansel drive?

As for your Sigma - I still love all three of my DP Merrills. Slow and clunky - but the image quality...

David Mantripp said...

Strange that Sigma is not shipping the loupe. It can't be significantly different to the one for the dp Quattros. ÃŽn photos it looks near identical...

James said...

It's kind of amazing the kinds of things people say about cars. It gets on the highway from an onramp just fine! (Not Ctein, one of the featured comments). I guess people must have been quite scarred from the 1970s when the econoboxes kind of made a show of struggling at it? Yeesh.

As for the Sigmas. I don't have room in my budget for a new full frame camera and lenses. But that Sigma DP2, it does not have an AF that will keep up with a one-year-old. Still love it anyway. Good thing I can afford more than one camera at a time, as long as they are older and cheap!

Kirk, Photographer/Writer said...

David, I am mystified. It seems like a product that would be a high profit margin add on that's relatively easy to make. Score for Movo.

dinksdad said...

It's too bad Sigma didn't provide for a slide-in EVF on the fp. I love the one on my Canon M6ii. Sigma seems determined only to make eccentric cameras.

Anthony Bridges said...

I guess I have to be the contrary voice here (concerning the Ctein post). I found it interesting as I fantasize about having a Tesla like vehicle one day. I'm not a car guy but I do like cool tech. So, I have to live vicariously through the ramblings of others. :)