River Dog
Always looking
I just got a NEX-3 body to backup my Leica CL film camera - I prefer film but going to do some commissions abroad, I need preview and digital backup.
Here are some similar shots with the same 50mm f/2 Zeiss Planar ZM. Obviously the crop factor alters the framing and shooting distance.
I do a lot of black and white film, so I adjusted the NEX-3 shots to the same film grain in Silver Efex Pro (Fuji Neopan 100)
Overall, I am very happy with this combination.
Leica CL
Sony NEX-3
Leica CL
Sony NEX-3
Here are some similar shots with the same 50mm f/2 Zeiss Planar ZM. Obviously the crop factor alters the framing and shooting distance.
I do a lot of black and white film, so I adjusted the NEX-3 shots to the same film grain in Silver Efex Pro (Fuji Neopan 100)
Overall, I am very happy with this combination.

Leica CL

Sony NEX-3

Leica CL

Sony NEX-3
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ampguy
Veteran
Thanks for the comparisons, very interesting. Silver FX seems like a very good tool.
River Dog
Always looking
Thanks for the comparisons, very interesting. Silver FX seems like a very good tool.
Be lost without it - especially the selective control points, kind of dodging and burning without the coathangers and cardboard.
Nokton48
Veteran
Wonderful comparision.
Thank you for sharing.
Thank you for sharing.
River Dog
Always looking
Wonderful comparision.
Thank you for sharing.
Non-scientific, I hasten to add. Technical stuff as follows:
I was using the same lens but not on the same day, or time of day (two weeks apart).
- 50mm, f4 at 1/125, Neopan 100 exposed for 200, developed in RO9
- The NEX-3 is equivalent to 75mm, f2.8 at 1/125, manual focus and auto ISO (JPEG not RAW, haven't tried that yet). Converted in Silver Efex Pro and Neopan grain added. Saved to JPEG 1000 pixels wide.
- The film was scanned at 800 dpi on an Epson V500
nikola
Well-known
Thanks for sharing.
But I'm more interested in ergonomics and handling, and have a hard time finding relevant information. It seams that everybody is preoccupied with tech specs and bunch of hardly relevant data.
Could you tell a few words on usability of this combination, and how does it compare to the experience of using a "real camera"?
How fast is it?
Thanks,
Nikola
But I'm more interested in ergonomics and handling, and have a hard time finding relevant information. It seams that everybody is preoccupied with tech specs and bunch of hardly relevant data.
Could you tell a few words on usability of this combination, and how does it compare to the experience of using a "real camera"?
Thanks,
Nikola
River Dog
Always looking
Ergonically, I like it - albeit it's a cheap compromise - but I think you would have to try it with the lenses you are going to use.It seams that everybody is preoccupied with tech specs and bunch of hardly relevant data.
It hangs down, front heavy. It is not so fast but it is unobtrusive. Pre-focussing would have to help - the focus needs the magnification view which is another button. It releases the view when you touch the shutter button, ready for the shot.
LCD rotates up quite a way and down less so, but enough to be quite useful. Haven't used it in very bright conditions yet but a Hoodman may help here.
Once the menu options are set up (which are pretty clumsy) I don't touch much else. The camera balances on a couple of curled fingers of the left hand, supporting part of the lens as well and works nicely like that. Portrait is a bit clumsier but not impossible.
I shoot Auto ISO in A, no tweaks needed as yet.
Very light and thin. The Leica CL is not exactly ergonomic perfection and the NEX is not bad enough for me to leave on a shelf, by any means.
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beyond
Jason Beyond
Somehow, I prefer the one done with the NEX3. The details in the highlights are more visible.
uhoh7
Veteran
Thanks for sharing.
But I'm more interested in ergonomics and handling, and have a hard time finding relevant information. It seams that everybody is preoccupied with tech specs and bunch of hardly relevant data.
Could you tell a few words on usability of this combination, and how does it compare to the experience of using a "real camera"?How fast is it?
Thanks,
Nikola
If you know your lens, it can be very fast. In fact the view finder is not necessary at all. With 7 fps you can hold it alongside your pocket with one hand, push the shutter with your thumb and move the foucs ring on your CV with a middle finger as it fires.
Rent the movie "Z"..that photojournalist would have loved it, hehe.
But its not the same as anything else. Has it's own feel and tricks.
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