Tsammyc, don't say that... my NX might get angry at you! :bsmilie: 85mm f/1.4 is coming on NX and this baby can do night with 30mm 2.0 mounted...
Sorry if I offended your NX

Tsammyc, don't say that... my NX might get angry at you! :bsmilie: 85mm f/1.4 is coming on NX and this baby can do night with 30mm 2.0 mounted...
Saying two cameras are the same because they have the same sensor is like saying that a high end mechanical pencil is same as a cheap one if you use the same lead.
If a MIC low end car uses a BMW engine are you saying they should be priced the same? What happened to handling? Optical viewfinder? SR? Electronic level ? Superior battery life? Better build?
In any case I can see the place for mirrorless cameras but given a choice I'd rather lug around a DSLR anyway.. When you have a tripod with you, mirrorless or DSLR also no difference to me.![]()
Whatever it is they are doing, it works. The K-5 gets better from ISO 200 to ISO 80 - my D700 does not gain this same advantage when going from ISO 200 to ISO 100, and so ends up losing to the K-5 in bright light....
tsammyc said:If you search around Pentaxforums, there is this chap called falconeye who claims that there is no difference between ISO 80-200 on the K-5 and other EXMOR sensor cameras. I don't completely understand the technical discussion, but apparently you can underexpose by a few EV and correct in PP to get the same results under different ISO.
Please don't mistake me. I'm not saying that the C3 is equivalent to a K5. There is a "?" after my statement. I'm just pointing out that it could be a way for a poor man to acquire the sensor quality and high ISO capability of a K5. Certainly with high ISO shots (say 1600 & 3200) using the same Pentax lenses I'm seeing similar image quality. I'm also saying that perhaps its time for those of us who have been waiting for Pentax's EVIL camera with K-mount capability to give up waiting. With the peaking and manual focus assist, this works even for an almost blind uncle like me. Lastly, I think its a good solution for a 2nd body. Together with my K5, I generally carry around a KX with a DA40 pancake to take street shots. The KX/DA40 is one of the more discreet SLR combinations. With the articulating LCD, the C3 is even more discreet as I can focus and "shoot from the hip"![]()
LOL You clearly didn't read the DXOmark comments. The only reason it measured lower on DR is that the NEX C3 doesn't have an ISO 100 setting. Otherwise it's identical. You can see it from the charts. Actually its probably 1/3 priced. Lelong lelong
It's ok if you can do this:It has poor poor shooting egro. Very odd and unstable shooting w/o a viewfinder at arms length. If its viewfinder with peeking mode, then, yes, perhaps its the best way forward for MF in the future. But the NEX does not have a EVF.
Is shooting this way (arms outstretched at subject trying to focus) more discreet than a quick classic pre-focus at ISO800, f5.6 or f8 at 3m using a 24mm, 35mm or 40mm lens on APS-C? (approach to around focus distance, take up camera and snap -'DONE' ; using hyper-focal distance HCB style?) I don't think so from personal experience.
It's ok if you can do this:
[vid]y-IOEAlBpSo[/vid]
Not many people can.![]()
Yeah, I've seen this vid before. Inspiring and nice technique.
Certainly no articulating screen needed
In fact, I don't understand all the 'you need less DOF' arguments that is going around in PentaxForums over the 'Q'.
Look at the shots from JoeWigfall (and many others, including HCB), shallow DOF was never the reasons for the good street shots.
Yes, actually some of the best street shots I've ever seen were done in good street light, probably requiring ISO80/100/200, F/8-F/11... And a fast shutter speed still.
What Danny Santos does is not street photography to me, it's street portraiture, and in some ways I find it sad that a lot of people here worship it, because HCB was never about finding random alluring people on the street and shooting them sneakily, it was about seeing the moment fall into place, seeing it come together and make a statement out of it, be it humorous, serious, satirical... I've told Danny that myself a few times, but he didn't seem to take it too well, so..
Trente Park is a good example of someone who uses strong light.
Besides, some of the best street photographs ever taken were blur. Amazing but true, and the blur was intentional.
It has poor poor shooting egro. Very odd and unstable shooting w/o a viewfinder at arms length. If its viewfinder with peeking mode, then, yes, perhaps its the best way forward for MF in the future. But the NEX does not have a EVF.
Is shooting this way (arms outstretched at subject trying to focus) more discreet than a quick classic pre-focus at ISO800, f5.6 or f8 at 3m using a 24mm, 35mm or 40mm lens on APS-C? (approach to around focus distance, take up camera and snap -'DONE' ; using hyper-focal distance HCB style?) I don't think so from personal experience.
Size, is not small with the form factor disaster as shown in the photo above. A 2nd cum backup camera for traveling (ie. not photographic assignments like wedding) will best be small, light, unobtrusive. Fitting into the jacket or small compartment of the day bag if you will (or at least that is my preference). A compact style camera works fine here. Not something that is so "thick" that it needs another camera bag or a proper lens compartment. In fact, I let my wife carry and use the back up 2nd camera. Its used by her as a 2nd eye to take those other stuff that I've missed or deemed uninterested to photography.
For street shots, there are really various ways to do them. Some even frown upon 'hip shots', but I see no wrong in them so long as it gets the picture.
Most of these shots are done with a wide angle lens. Focus is either using hyper focal distance, a pre-selected focus point or auto-point selection. As such imo, an articulating screen does nothing to improve hip shots.
I really can't let you draw away the Pentax faithful like this.
Let them be guided by the blind faith and wait for a Pentax mirrorless (rumoured to be coming after the Q btw)
Jokes aside,
I really don't find that the NEX is the answer at all.
It has poor poor shooting egro. Very odd and unstable shooting w/o a viewfinder at arms length. If its viewfinder with peeking mode, then, yes, perhaps its the best way forward for MF in the future. But the NEX does not have a EVF.
Is shooting this way (arms outstretched at subject trying to focus) more discreet than a quick classic pre-focus at ISO800, f5.6 or f8 at 3m using a 24mm, 35mm or 40mm lens on APS-C? (approach to around focus distance, take up camera and snap -'DONE' ; using hyper-focal distance HCB style?) I don't think so from personal experience.
Very discreet indeed
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Secondly, poor form factor. Sorry, just too ugly as I've said before.
Size, is not small with the form factor disaster as shown in the photo above. A 2nd cum backup camera for traveling (ie. not photographic assignments like wedding) will best be small, light, unobtrusive. Fitting into the jacket or small compartment of the day bag if you will (or at least that is my preference). A compact style camera works fine here. Not something that is so "thick" that it needs another camera bag or a proper lens compartment. In fact, I let my wife carry and use the back up 2nd camera. Its used by her as a 2nd eye to take those other stuff that I've missed or deemed uninterested to photography.
For street shots, there are really various ways to do them. Some even frown upon 'hip shots', but I see no wrong in them so long as it gets the picture.
Most of these shots are done with a wide angle lens. Focus is either using hyper focal distance, a pre-selected focus point or auto-point selection. As such imo, an articulating screen does nothing to improve hip shots.
Wide angle 'hip shot' using a K24mm
![]()
take the 2nd b&w pic for example, and compare it with joe wigfall who uses his hands. pinhole's example is too rigid in framing. this is the kind of effect you will continue to get if you shoot from the hip, what more with an articulating screen. joe wigfall aims with his hands, which is way more flexible with higher degree of freedom. and the feedback from a shot (mirror slap) is also important, vs an electronic shutter
dude, you definitely don't understand what DR is. if some camera can go to ISO10 with DR 1000 stop, it IS a HUGE advantage.