Now off with a odd mismatch of cameras: The S1R with the 85mm Sigma Art lens and the Canon G15 (with freshly charged batteries...). Have a great day! Drink lots of coffee! Play hard.
Thursday, June 11, 2020
Wednesday, June 10, 2020
Currently "testing" two different cameras. From nearly the same era. But what does "testing" really mean in this instance?
Belinda cleaned out a closet and found an older camera. It's an Olympus epm-1 which is a very small, very thin m4:3rd camera that hit the market around 2011 and did not take the world by storm. At the time the Olympus offerings, regardless of price, were limited to a sensor resolution of 12.3 megapixels. The epm-1 is the smallest interchangeable lens mirrorless camera that I've come across yet. It's just a tiny bit bigger in one dimension than an iPhone XR and smaller in another dimension. But I don't want to get too multi-dimensional here.... Olympus sent it to me out of the blue. No request to review. No request to write about it even in passing. It came to me some time in 2012 along with a tiny flash that fits in the hot shoe and a highly promotional, super small, black backpack to hold the camera, charger and flash unit. I spent a day trying to figure out where they hid the controls and then, frustrated, I gave it to Belinda to see if she could get any use out of it. Turns out that she is much smarter than me and she used it right up until she discovered the Canon G15. At which point she handed back all the epm-1 stuff to me.
It's funny because the epm-1 arrived back in the studio this week and shortly afterwards I took possession of another G15 so I could have one too. A confluence of weird cameras. (They seem right at home with the equally eccentric - but loveable - Sigma fp).
So, right now I'm "testing" them. What does that really mean? Let me explain. I have a camera test pedestal that is a massive lead and nickel alloy tripod head on top of a reinforced concrete pillar that goes down through the floor of the lab (without touching the actual floor --- too many vibrations!!!) to bedrock forty seven and a half feet below. I mount the cameras on this and use a laser interferometer to get the camera perfectly level and parallel to the NASA test target that I had micro-etched with blue lasers onto an 8 by 12 foot sheet of one inch thick titanium. It's a good test target. It seems dimensionally stable.
I can't be in the room at the time of actual testing because we create a complete vacuum in the space in order to rule out atmospheric anomalies during testing. This also helps to prevent dust from impinging on our test results.
The room isn't state-of-the-art since we only filter particles down to 1.5 microns but we're working on improving our technologies because of the important work we're doing here with used, $100 to $150 dollar cameras, which were created nearly a decade ago.
Before we have our robotic interface run the actual tests we mould the center of a 30 pound warhead core of spent plutonium into the shape of the exterior of the camera and place the final plutonium construct on top of the camera to minimize any residual, external vibrations. A tight fitting, low gamma emitting plutonium pseudo "bean bag" is just the right solution for any shutter shock that might be resident in the cameras as well.
Once everything is clamped into place we test the cameras over a vast range of temperatures starting with an immersion in liquid nitrogen and then increasing the temperatures up to the point of failure, or until the camera's exterior begins to melt.
All professionals should know the "melt" point of their cameras if they are to truly deliver the best results for their clients. So far, of all the cameras VSL has tested in this manner, the Pentax K-01 tops the scale for heat resistance and resistance to electromagnetic vituperative lashings. It did, however, fail our test for high pressure immersion in Diet Coke (one of the toughest tests our lab currently has, in house, for satellites and cameras).
Once we've gotten several thousand terabytes of "metrics" that cover aspect from Nyquist quiescence to all the relevant Ferbil integers from our lab tests, we feel more confident in taking said unit out into the "real world" and "making" test images to evaluate its actual performance. It's a months' long process as we need to shoot the camera in all natural lighting and weather conditions and we sometimes wait months for the right intersection of temperature, humidity and astrological star stage.
Finally we give it to our physics guy so he can take pictures of his girlfriend standing next to her mountain bike. That's the crucial end point of the testing.
We're in early days on the two cameras mentioned above. Really early days. How early? We're still in the battery testing stage at this point. How do we test the batteries? Glad you asked that. First we fire up the cyclotron and.............
Somebody make coffee! This might go on for a while...
But in all seriousness (if I have any left) I'm having fun playing with fun, basic, stupid and cheap cameras this week. Maybe I'll discover something no one else has. Maybe they'll end up back in a drawer for the next 10 years.
Microaggressions. That's when your camera won't switch modes as fast as you want it to. But it seems to require sentience from a camera and that may be a stretch. Conversely maybe it's really the action you take against the camera when it doesn't perform as you'd expected. But really, isn't that why we test?
It's June 10th. Absolutely nothing is happening today and that's okay. Sometimes it's nice if life just proceeds on its own.
Yesterday was super hot and sticky here. This morning I woke up at 5:30 this morning and it was a cool, dry 65 degrees. Just right for a swim. Actually, just right for anything. Yesterday's early swim practice was packed with people. I had to share a lane with Olympic gold medalist, Tommy Hannan; it was intimidating. He's half my age, twice as fast and...well, a gold medalist in butterfly. We pretty quickly determined that we should split the lane instead of trying to circle. No way I was going to swim on his intervals. It all worked out. We're still on speaking terms...
Today was a lightly attended workout; I had my own lane in the pool at 6 a.m. The water was cooler today. That means someone at the pool turned on the aerators last night. It's easier to swim faster in cooler water. 76 degrees Fahrenheit is optimum for racing but anything under 82 is fine for an hour long workout.
The sunrise did its beautiful light show once again, this time with a deep, French blue background and warm, magenta-hued clouds accented with soft orange. I with I'd had a camera in the pool with me because at one point the whole balance between pool lights, sky, clouds, and the pervasive glow of ambient light was astonishing. I swam backstroke while I watched the colors build to a crescendo and then, like flicking a switch, just turn into normal morning light. No big yards today. Just a long, strong swim in perfect water and perfect light.
I went home, cooked two over easy, fried eggs, made toast from sourdough bread, and tossed in a slice of ham for good measure. Yummy. But after I washed my dishes and thought a bit about sitting in front of the computer aimlessly working on....something/anything...I decided not to waste such a beautiful morning indoors. I put on an old pair of Merrill walking shoes, grabbed the Sigma fp camera and headed downtown.
The Sigma fp is a fun camera for casual shooting. I use it mostly bare (without an auxiliary finder) and almost always in the aperture mode. The 45mm Sigma lens I use has an external aperture ring which is handy and oh so nicely made. The 1/3rd stop clicks are just about perfect. The lens is supposed to be "soft" at f2.8, which is its widest aperture. I'm not so sure "soft" is exactly the right description for what happens to the image at f2.8. I think it's more a lowering of contrast than a major loss of resolution. That being said, if you are a stickler for absolute, corner to corner prickly sharpness then maybe using f2.8 will be problematic.
With this in mind I like to set the lens to f5.6 and shoot just about all my street photography and little fine-artsy documentations at that setting. I find that f4.0 is also very nice: sharp and contrasty but I like that extra depth of field I get from 5.6 for most normal focal length shots on full frame. When I'm shooting bigger vistas I generally opt to go to f8.0 so I can get reasonable focus in more depth. Sharpness, and extension of sharpness in depth, are also quite dependent on the focusing distance as well as lens design. Some lenses perform better as the subject-to-camera distance increases. Most film lenses used to be optimized for best performance at a distance of 50X the focal length of the lens. I'm not sure if that changed when lens makers started implementing close up corrections that are done by moving various lens element groups independently while focusing or not. It stands to reason that a lens would be optimized for one extreme or the other. The moving groups are an attempt to have performance at both ends. And in the middle.
I remember using earlier macro lenses from Canon and Nikon (pre-CRC*, *close range correction) and experiencing noticeable decreases in sharpness as I focused closer to infinity.
One thing I love about shooting with the Sigma fp for casual work is the ability to bring up a waveform monitor on the LCD and work with exposure the same way I do when shooting video. A waveform gives me more actionable information than a simple histogram. I just make sure the waveform doesn't go over 100% and I know that nothing in the highlights will burn out.
On a day like today, when my photography is ultra-casual, I really end up shooting in a modified "program" mode. I want control over the f-stop so I use the "A" setting but then I also set the camera to auto-ISO. Most of the shooting was done in bright sun so I certainly didn't fear that the camera would select an unusably high ISO. I'm happy with the sensor performance all the way to 6400 ISO and even beyond but the camera was mostly selecting ISO 100. I also can't use the camera's digital image stabilization with raw files so I want to make sure I'm shooting at a shutter speed I can predictably handhold. For me, with the 45mm, I try to be conservative and set the auto-ISO lower shutter speed limit to 1/160th as a bottom/slowest speed.
My most used control is the exposure compensation dial which is the control wheel on the back of the camera. Usually, I'll tweak an exposure up a bit for a lighter than average subject to make sure we're not dropping the mid-tones too low. With the waveform monitor engaged it's a simple strategy. I just look at the photo preview on the LCD and turn the dial in the correct direction until the waveform is where I want it. Shooting raw is part of my point and shoot strategy with this camera. I can be underexposed by up to four stops (I'm usually not...) and still get a usable file in post production. If I know a highlight might burnout I'll under expose by a decent margin knowing I can hold the highlight in post and normalize the image with a shadow slider and some mid-tone contrast correction.
Today I wore the camera 1960's tourist style. That's where you wear the camera on a neckstrap, have the neckstrap around the back of your neck and let the camera bounce around on your chest or stomach. That way the camera strap doesn't keep sliding off my shoulder and the camera is instantly ready to be grabbed in both hands and used. It also makes one look very photo-nerdy so everyone just assumes you are a harmless tourist...not an opportunistic artist.
I would have taken the new (used) Canon G15 out for a spin but UPS seems to have mis-delivered the package. I got a notice telling me the package had been delivered to my front door but the time stamp for the drop was supposed to have occurred when both of us were home and paying attention. I usually hear the trucks pull up and usually the driver rings the door bell before running off. Not today. So, I've started the sad process of tracking down the lost package. It's so frustrating. I may never buy anything that needs to be shipped ever again. My local camera store will be delighted to read that... Now I'm waiting for someone at the local UPS distribution center to call me back. Right. We'll see if that happens. No big deal, I guess. It's not like I was depending entirely on that particular camera to change my life.
As I was photographing buildings and signs on Congress Ave. I noticed that the LaVazza coffee shop was open so I ducked in to get a cappuccino to go. I was the only customer in the store. That's got to be pretty safe. The coffee was as good as I remembered. They make a great cappuccino. I also like to drop by there because Elliott Erwitt did a calendar for the parent company and this shop has a big, mural sized, black and white of a couple with a small baby drinking LaVazza coffee will waiting to catch a train in some far off land. The baby is looking right into the camera and the parents are otherwise occupied. It's a wonderful photo. Seeing it enhances the effect of the coffee.
I also love the fact that their to-go cups have an insulating sleeve that runs down the entire expanse of the cup. It's a small touch but thoughtful. I haven't enjoyed a cappuccino that good in months. Really. It was that good. It was comforting to know that LaVazza is still there since, sadly, Medici Caffé is now closed up and gone from Congress Ave. Alas, it was one of my favorite haunts.
A giant, yellow wall. Too yellow. But sharp. Oh so sharp.
There were so few people downtown that it reminded me of the first week or so of the lockdown, back in March. No one was heading into any of the big office high rises and no one was in line for coffee, etc. The only people I ran into were various homeless people and private security people who are tasked with preserving the "sanctity" of all the private property.
The homeless are at a double disadvantage in downtown these days. They have historically survived by panhandling from the downtown workers and a never ending stream of tourists, but both of those streams have effectively vanished. Secondly, they are the epitome of a "cash" enterprise since they don't have checking accounts and don't have credit card terminals. Few people walk around with cash anymore. I'm not entirely against a handout if their story is good and my (sometimes flawed) intuition prods me but I've long since stopped using cash or even carrying it around with me. I don't think I'm an outlier in this regard either.
The weather was so comfortable I could have stayed downtown all day. But I'd been up since 5:30 and needed to break for lunch, and also wanted to check on my (failed) camera delivery, so I headed back home to warm up some leftover pizza and check in.
In closing I guess I have to say that I enjoy the Sigma fp precisely because of its earnest potential and in spite of its small flaws. Things I wish I could change? Not the AF. Not the C-AF. I just want a few little things like, the ability to attach a small EVF like we used to do with the Olympus EP-2, 3 and 5 cameras. I'm learning to modify my dirty baby diaper hold with this camera so I guess I'll survive. That's about it. Amazing that I really can't think of anything else I'd want to change. But if they do make an EVF attachment I'll get right in line to buy one.
Coda; I talked with two very sharp and responsive people at UPS. They took my information down and advised me that someone would call me in one hour. I got a call 42 minutes later. They asked me to look outside our front door. The package had just been delivered. They were asking me to confirm. Yes! That is the best customer service I've had on a delivery for a long, long, time. Well done UPS. Very well done!!!
If you see my UPS driver would you let them know I'm at
Latitude 30.2832 by Longitude -978030 ?
That would be nice...
Tuesday, June 09, 2020
Just a note to say that I miss walking through the streets and being able to photograph interesting people without face masks...
I wear one. I busted a photographer last week who was about to head into a camera store without his mask. I think we all deserve to be safe. I think we all have a responsibility to keep other people safe.
I'm wearing one until the health authorities sound the "all clear."
But that doesn't mean I don't miss seeing beautiful, naked faces out in public places. And my cameras feel the same way...
Wandering around town with a point and shoot camera while I wait for another point and shoot camera to arrive tomorrow...
Photographers can be wacky. Many believe that they're destined to do only one sort of photography and think they need to find "the" perfect camera and then use it until it's all used up or until something new and plainly superior hits the market. I'm afraid that's not the way my brain got wired. In my wacky and non-linear career I've shot jobs for clients with 8x10 inch view cameras, 4x5 inch view cameras, scads of medium format cameras and more than a handful of 35mm cameras. I've owned (and used) more digital cameras than most people have owned different shirts.
I'd love to buy into the mindset of the "perfect" camera because it would probably save me no small bucket of money and time. But I more or less discard out of hand the mentality of "finding a groove and staying in it." I like to mix things up. When we swim in our masters workouts we don't pick just one stroke and one distance and then put our heads down and slog through the hour, we do practice as a series of sets. One set might be eight x fifty yard swims of butterfly stroke. The next set might be two hundred yards of kicking with a kick board. The next set might be eight X two hundred yards of freestyle on a specific time interval. Followed by some number of hundred yard swims of all four strokes. Butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke and freestyle. We might choose to do drills in which we don't even do a recognized stroke. The mix keeps it fun. The constant movement shreds the time. Every muscle gets a workout.
I can't think I could ever be one of those guys who goes out into the wilderness year after year and lugs along a big, view camera and a monolithic tripod. Ducking under the dark cloth to focus my upside down image. Watching water slow down to mush. Sliding in film holders as the sun beats down or the snow swirls around. It's hard to catch an awkward flirty glance from a beautiful woman in a dusky coffee shop with that kind of rig. With that kind of rigor. With that amount to gear tunnel vision. More like rigor mortis.
We probably still need a big cameras with big sensors to shoot big projects; the ones that require massive files and lots of detail. But maybe that's not rational anymore either. Maybe most of the stuff we photograph that doesn't move could be handled with a $600 m4:3 camera --- if it comes with a high res mode/ or if we remember how to stack stuff in PhotoShop.
I have a range of cameras and I have an iPhone. They handle different subject matter. That iPhone is darned handy when I'm standing on the deck of a pool at 5:55 in the morning and I'm just looking to prove "I was there." That Lumix S1R with the pricey glass? It's really great for those times when I want to make a big architectural print or play at being a detail oriented landscape shooter.
All the cameras in between? They're like the four strokes in swimming, with a few drill tools tossed in to keep it all fresh.
These photos were taken with that ancient Canon point and shoot camera, the G10. I took it along on a walk with me because it was the solution that presented itself (and looked like the best compromise) when I decided to do a seven mile walk around the lake. It's lightweight and highly portable but it's also robust and unflinching. Some people think it doesn't offer enough dynamic range but I think people who worry about dynamic range have just lost the thread when it comes to exposing their shots correctly.
On another day there might be another choice. Sometimes we bring out the Lumix GX8 for no other reason beyond my belief that it looks so cool. It's also a good tool and sometimes the camera gets chosen for its ability to work well with certain lenses.
I'm tired of the idea that we have to defend our camera choices. I think that unless you have a specific use case in mind you might find pleasure in starting to treat cameras more like wardrobe and less like cars. We generally have only one or two very utilitarian cars but we have plenty of shirts and pants. And shoes. Grab the shorts and sandals that are most comfortable for that day in the sun you have planned and, while you are at it, grab a comfortable camera that makes your day more pleasant because of its compromises, not in spite of them.
There seems to be a disconnecting that happens to photographers. They feel as though they must have a photographic purpose in everything that they do. They leave the house and head to a soccer field to catch a game so they feel they must have just the right camera with a long lens and must spend the time shooting (not watching) the soccer game. The serious street photographer must have a purpose so when they leave their apartments they have their Leica M cameras or their Fuji X-Pro cameras attached to their wrists with an exquisite wrist strap and they embark on the search for the perfect Vivian Maier Moment. Do they have an internal quota of images they feel they must fill?
I can't always be so.....linear. So organized. So regimented. When I leave the house sometimes it's to have coffee with a friend. Sometimes just coffee alone. While I'm out I might walk around the lake for more exercise. I might hang out on the streets in downtown just to soak up the vibe. But everything in life isn't tethered with a steel cable to photography.
It's almost better to forget that you dragged a camera along and be in the moment right up until some Photo Satori smacks you in the head and demands that you change gears from some leisure activity to switch in the moment to decisive moment guy and get that one great image, after which you can put the camera back down, pick up that cup of tasty espresso and get back to that riveting conversation you were having with that beautiful woman at the next table.
So, today is going to be really hot. I'm still going for a truncated walk in the downtown space. I want to see if the protest graffiti is still up. I want to see if Intelligensia really does make a good cup of cappuccino. I want to watch the clouds play around above me. But I don't want to carry around a giant Tenba bag or gruesome Tamrac bag filled with heavy cameras and every lens I own because that would put such an excruciating burden on something of leisure that should be much easier and more natural. A simple walk with an indifferent camera. One that doesn't impel me to keep chugging away at it and trying to help justify why it came along on a walk the core mission of which was not the life and death struggle of getting yet another image.
Someone asked in the comments yesterday 'whatever happened to that poor, neglected GX85 camera?' Don't worry. It's in rotation. It'll resurface at some point. Right after I get through playing around with the G15 tomorrow. But maybe before I pull out the Sigma fp and use it for photographs again...
We're in the middle of a pandemic. I can't work for clients yet (in good conscience) and I'm not comfortable asking strangers to stop, take off their masks and trust me to make important art with their faces. So why all the angst about which camera is best? If we're just walking around looking, and sitting on a bench drinking take out coffee, then what the fuck does it matter? No, really.
Do you pay attention to the U.S. stock market? What the heck is happening? Apple at $345 a share today. Amazing.
Monday, June 08, 2020
And just like that we're back. What a week. Glad to have time off to meditate about everything.
Last week was a great week to suspend blogging. There was too much raw emotion and too much happening outside the sphere of photography for me to concentrate at all on my favorite passion, pastime and career. Like many of you I spent the time reading the news and, from time to time, I attended some of the protests here in Austin to see with my own eyes the reality of the moment and how different it was from some of the television broadcasting. I reminded myself that the news media survives by finding outliers and the most "newsworthy" or salacious moments even if they don't accurately reflect the 99% of protesters who were peaceful, polite and truly impassioned to express their anguish. It was refreshing to bear witness to reality so I could insulate myself from the emotional responses that inevitably came from each end of the political spectrum. The protests are legitimate and a necessary part of much needed social change.
Instead of letting the events of the week consume me I worked on getting things around the studio/office ready for an opening of the business in stages. After donating a bunch of gear to a local non-profit I spent a few hours further "editing" my almost random collection of lighting and photography gear into "keep" and "donate or toss" piles and I feel I've made real progress forward. Another couple months of lockdown and I'll be able to fit most of my gear in one camera bag. That would be novel...
But we're also getting direct mail cards ready to let clients know we're re-opening and ready to start bidding on jobs. We also want them to know that we are fully engaged and didn't have to sell off important gear or change our ways of billing, etc.
I'm back on schedule with daily swim workouts, long, hot walks and intermittent napping. The process of getting back my swim endurance has been less protracted and painful than I imagined it might be which gives me a modicum of hope that I'll crest my 60s more or less intact. Since the beginning of the "stay at home" period I've logged about 168 miles of running and 28 swim days. Sadly (and hopefully, temporary) I've gained two pounds of body weight. Working on its swift removal.
One thing I rarely discuss here is financial planning and investing but it's an interesting time to take stock and re-balance our strategies for the future. I spent much of the last few months honing my basic understanding of finance and economics (both of which I did study at university) trying to understand the strategy of investing in a time when government bond returns hover around 0%, many state and muni bonds are flirting with negative yields and the marketplace has been flooded with trillions of dollars of stimulus money. I've also watched, with interest, as the dollar has declined in value by about 6% against an international basket of currencies. You'll have to draw your own conclusions but my play since March 23 is a weekly move into U.S. large cap equities and mutual funds to dollar cost average my per share purchases. So far the strategy is working well and my thought is that equities will be the one zone for profit and growth for at least the next two years. There will obviously be bumps and set backs but the longer term success seems probably. For the moment we're feeling good.
When I am able to compartmentalize the social unrest and the vagaries of the financial markets and think of other stuff I find I am still enjoying my time with photography. I keep working to better understand the Sigma fp and every time I take it out for a casual photography walk I feel I'm rewarded with files that are really, technically very good.
It's such an interesting camera because at its heart the sensor and the color science are both state of the art and actually a step above the actual imaging potential of every digital camera I've shot with. Even the high ISO files are a step above the other 24 megapixel cameras. But, on the other hand, anything other than central zone, S-Af is less than stellar and I'm not even sure the camera actually does multi-zone C-AF at all. The body is obviously little more than a metal brick and the screen on the back, which, while lovely to look at, doesn't move, flip, rotate or otherwise add to overall usability. The camera, in one sense, is like a big litmus test for photographers. Which do you value? Absolute Image Quality? Or, All the operational niceties we've come to take for granted?
It's not a totally binary thing. Most fine arts photographers whose subjects are relatively stationary will be able to master the camera operation without issue. But if fast moving subjects, long lenses, and the requirement for quick and kinetic focusing are real considerations then the camera will present a lot of unwanted friction.
Which brings me to my latest camera acquisition.
After dragging a Panasonic S1R with the 50mm f1.4 Pro S lens around town, and then the Sigma fp with a finder magnifier and some big Sigma Art lenses, I was looking for some relief and I went through the gear cabinet looking for a "comfort" camera. Something I could bring along on a protracted, hot walk and not feel like I was carrying a house on my shoulder. I came across the Canon G10 and took it with me as I walked through downtown with my friend (an amazing actor and singer), Kenny. The real reason for the walk was just to catch up and check in with each other. I shot Kenny's portraits for his first album cover and we've know each other since my early days as Zach Theatre's photographer.
I didn't want the fumbling around with a camera to take away from my time with my old friend so a Canon G10, set to "P" and locked in at 100 ISO was just right. It fit into my very smallest bag, along with my wallet, car keys, and an extra face mask.
The G10 is a camera I loved, then sold, then in a moment of remorse bought another copy from my friend, Frank. The sensor is a 14.7 megapixel, 1:1.7 inch CCD Canon unit that does its best work at ISO 80 or 100. It's happy to shoot in bright sun but it's usable at up to 400 ISO, for the ultra-picky, and up to 800 ISO for the "content is more important than ultimate performance" crowd. The camera features a 28-140mm equivalent lens which isn't very fast but is very sharp and tech issue free.
If you loved easy to use cameras that are not menu-driven you've come to the right instrument. There is an external ISO dial, concentric with the mode dial, on one side of the top plate and a +/- EV compensation dial on the other side. Pretty much all you need for actually taking photographs.
There is a little, optical tunnel finder but I find the rear LCD bright enough even to use in solid daylight. Nice to have the optical finder, just in case.
How good are the images if you do everything right? Hmmm. Really good. I illustrated a large portion of a book on lighting with this camera (on a good tripod and using ample light) and no one noticed that we weren't shooting on a bigger camera at the time.
But...This camera already exists in my inventory and somewhere above I talked about ordering a newer camera. I ordered a second Canon G15 yesterday. The short answer to: Why? is that I bought one, used, about a year ago and loved it. Not as high a megapixel count as the G10 but much faster to focus and capable of yielding a much less noisy file for those times when a higher ISO is just plain necessary. The camera and I got along swimmingly and I was so impressed with it that I lent it to Belinda to take as her main camera when we traveled up to Montreal last year. I never got the camera back. She liked it that much. In fact, I'll say that it's one of the very few cameras she's really enjoyed using since she bought her first real camera back in college: an Olympus OM-1 with the 50mm f1.8.
I'm exploring the two ends of modern photography. On one hand I've recently done a family portrait for our neighbors with a 47 megapixel, full frame S1R and then, almost as a reaction to the technical perfection of that solution, I'm out on the streets and the trails with a "last decade" point and shoot camera, blazing away in program mode. Somehow it all makes for a nice balance.
I can hardly wait for my new (used) G15 and three batteries. I already know the G15 to be one of the very best compact digital cameras where price, performance and reliability is concerned. At less than $200 it's a steal. Belinda and I were kidding around about the compact Canons yesterday over dinner. I brashly stated that I was only going to take the G10 and G15 with me on our next vacation. She was quiet for a few seconds and then, with a very serious expression, she said, "I'm going to hold you to that..."
In other news: Panasonic announced a new lens that I would like to buy. It's a weird focal length range. It's a 20mm to 60mm and it has a slow-ish fixed maximum aperture of f4.0. Why do I want one? It's supposed to be smaller, lighter and cheaper than anything Panasonic has yet introduced in the S1 system. A really nice, carry around solution. The pre-order retail price is set at $599 and the marketing hype points to it being a very good optical performer. If you use an S1 or Sigma fp the slower aperture should rarely, rarely be an impediment to good photography as both of those cameras can shoot at nose bleed ISOs --- but without the nose bleed.
The one thing that keeps me from pre-ordering is my lack of excitement about wider angles of view and my trepidation about having a zoom that only goes to 60mm. I don't have any hesitation about optical quality but right now I think my shooting methods match up better with the 24-105mm Panasonic S lens I already own. And it's a darn good performer as well.
To recap: We spent the last two months staying in reasonable shape and then getting back into good shape. I spent (way too much) time learning about finance and economics and re-balancing my portfolios. So far, I've had surprising overall success which is partially a result of getting over any fear of the market collapsing and investing early and often. When it comes to cameras I've been playing with the Sigma fp and loving it for controlled shooting. The S1 cameras I consider to be the best compromise between performance, solid build and crazy good image quality (especially when using S1R and S1 cameras for their optimized strengths as an intermixed system) and I'm embracing the small and bullet proof Canon G10 and G15 cameras for just messing around, or working light and under duress. A G15 is, in many ways, a perfect protest documentation camera....
Happy to be back to work --- even if only marginally. Even happier to be back at the blog --- though everything is changing all the time. Let's look forward, not backward. We all still have a lot left to do.
Welcome back! Kirk
P.S. Just editing this and fielded four phone calls asking for bids. I guess the end of our extended "vacation" is now in sight.
fp skies are outrageous.
I'm still wearing a mask whenever I leave the house.
Better safe than sorry. I'm also starting to think of it as a fashion expression...
The big flagship J.W. Marriott still closed up tighter than a clamshell.
The revenue loss at the bars must be staggering.
Most of the graffiti is gone now but my favorite piece is still up.
This is Charles Morgan. He is telling people about the epidemic of
veteran suicide in the U.S. He asked me to take his photograph.
I was happy to do so. I should have gotten about 18 inches lower.
I'll go back today and see if he's still at Congress Ave. and 6th Street.
Maybe he'll give me a second chance.
The new mask chic.
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