M9 Shots as requested
M9 Shots as requested
Here are a few shots from the M9 if you're still interested in seeing some. Other than converting the last two to black and white, these were how they came out of the camera, no color processing (except those last 2 black and whites0 other than uploading from a Mac to a mobile me gallery. Unfortunately, Mac converts them from a DNG to 3.5-8 meg Jpeg and limits file dimension to maximum 1024 pixels for some reason. Original dimension example is 5200 × 3456 and 36.4 megs each as DNG Uncompressed raw files. I'd be happy to provide these as a DNG if someone wants to host them on their server. Just send me a private message with your email and I'll send them over as a DNG original file to the first guy willing to host 'em for others reading this thread to see.
This is not a composition test, nor a photography critique, these shots suck, however hopefully you'll be able to see what you're looking for with regards to picture quality out of the M9. Please grade the camera, not my photography skills from these test shots. I tried picking a few different backgrounds, textures, lighting and indoor/outdoor just to snap some different types of material and levels of detail and got lucky with a super foggy day on the golf course that just begged to be black and white. You can actually pick out the golfer and a cart through the fog on the right side of the last photo.
All photos were taken with a Summilux f/1.4 50mm on an M9 and looks like ISO was at 200 the whole time.
Hope this helps!
Crap......as I'm sitting here typing this, it is dark out, so here's one more which should give a quick idea of low-light. This is a 3 second exposure at ISO 200 with 28mm f/2.8 ASPH 6-bit lens. Again, we're not judging content or composition here, just trying to quickly give some "what the camera does" shots to help answer question asked above.
and here's a less-than optimum light, but not low light taken just after sundown today, forgot I took this. The 28mm arrived this afternoon and was playing with it out in front of a restaurant and shot this while looking at the frame lines vs. photo taken. Again, ISO 200.