Bill Pierce
Well-known
There have been a lot of new digital cameras introduced recently, the Sony A9, the Nikon D850, the Fuji GFX, the Canon 6D , the Leica M10 and, I’m sure, a few I’m not aware of. For the most part, the most heralded improvements are based on improved sensors. It was easier when film was king. You just bought a roll of the new film and put it in your old camera. Super XX was superseded by Tri-X . HP5, by HP5+. And then P3200 and Tech Pan opened new worlds.
A new digital camera is a little more expensive than a roll of a new film; so, we should ask ourselves if we really need it. Face it; when your brand announces a new camera, It’s pretty exciting - more pixels, more frames per second, more tonal range. But my current camera has enough pixels to make a 16x20 print that you can press your nose against. And I’ve seen larger, poster sized reproductions that looked good when viewers didn’t attack them with their noses. I don’t shoot football anymore, and my most active subjects, my dog and people on the street, don’t need 20 fps. I shot a landscape the other day with detail in all but the darkest shadow and still had some tonal headroom. That’s not to say there aren’t scenes with a greater range than my cameras can capture. But a fair number of them look strange and unnatural in print when I just exploit the maximum my camera can currently do.
I love my toys, but they are more expensive than a roll of film. But the real reason I hold off a bit on new gear is that it doesn’t make my pictures any better.
Your thoughts?
A new digital camera is a little more expensive than a roll of a new film; so, we should ask ourselves if we really need it. Face it; when your brand announces a new camera, It’s pretty exciting - more pixels, more frames per second, more tonal range. But my current camera has enough pixels to make a 16x20 print that you can press your nose against. And I’ve seen larger, poster sized reproductions that looked good when viewers didn’t attack them with their noses. I don’t shoot football anymore, and my most active subjects, my dog and people on the street, don’t need 20 fps. I shot a landscape the other day with detail in all but the darkest shadow and still had some tonal headroom. That’s not to say there aren’t scenes with a greater range than my cameras can capture. But a fair number of them look strange and unnatural in print when I just exploit the maximum my camera can currently do.
I love my toys, but they are more expensive than a roll of film. But the real reason I hold off a bit on new gear is that it doesn’t make my pictures any better.
Your thoughts?