Pixii pics again...
... I was documenting the day's activities around the office, and now that I've got the Pixii's rangefinder dialed in thanks to Melric's home-study course [see earlier post] I was able to use my 28mm Voigtlander Ultron and 50mm Nokton with confidence. By my standards it was a fairly long shooting day -- I started about 11:30 am and finished up about 4 pm, during which time I pushed through about 270 frames. I have two batteries for the Pixii now, but was a little worried about having enough juice to get through the afternoon. Still, since I was shooting at a fairly moderate pace, I was able to finish off one battery, put it in an external charger, and have it just barely recharged by the time I had run down the second battery. If I were going to be averaging more shots per hour, I'd need a third battery to make sure the first one had time to recharge and keep the rotation going; probably will buy another one this weekend just in case. The NP-FW50 batteries are readily available thanks to their use in various Sony cameras, and they're not expensive.
One thing I noticed while gripping the Pixii for multiple hours at a stretch was that the camera body, elegantly designed though it is, doesn't provide much purchase for the third through fifth fingers of my right hand, and after a while those fingers got pretty tired. It would be nice if some third party made a well-designed finger grip for the Pixii, like this
Kamerakraft grip for Leica Ms (fun fact: I have an online acquaintance who uses this grip and he says it also fits the Canon 7/7s perfectly!) or even a nice half case to provide a little more gripping area. But that's one of the problems with using a very-limited-production camera owned only by the discerning few... no third-party accessory support!
Anyway, aside from those issues, I was pleased with the results of my afternoon's shooting, especially considering that I didn't do much with the Pixii other than to set it to portrait profile, spot metering, auto white balance, and let it rip! I started out at ISO 1600, then dialed back to 800 later.
Fairly close focusing with the Nokton at f/2.8:
Hair decor
The boss decided they were going to try out the orange parasols today, so things got photogenic in a hurry...
Orange parasols I |
Orange parasols II |
Orange parasols III
The backlight was pretty strong by the last session of the day. It was good for revealing skin textures, but the sun slanting in through the window blinds brought out some unpleasant-looking background color fringing in the Nokton (I assume this is what those two Canadian bros call "loca", for lateral chromatic aberration?) so I dodged that bullet by converting those images to b&w. This would have been a good time to try the Pixii's dedicated monochrome mode, but of course I didn't think of that until later...
Backlight I color |
Backlight II color |
Backlight III monochrome |
Backlight IV monochrome