petronius
Veteran
Nikon Coolpix E5600, 2010

Out to Lunch
Ventor
dourbalistar
Buy more film
Ricoh GR Digital 4. Super compact, great B&W output from its 10 megapixel 1/1.7″ CCD sensor. Not that old, but it's the oldest digital camera I still own (but hopefully not for much longer). On sale in the Classifieds. 

R0012755.jpg by dourbalistar, on Flickr

R0012558.jpg by dourbalistar, on Flickr

R0012605.jpg by dourbalistar, on Flickr

R0012854.jpg by dourbalistar, on Flickr

R0012755.jpg by dourbalistar, on Flickr

R0012558.jpg by dourbalistar, on Flickr

R0012605.jpg by dourbalistar, on Flickr

R0012854.jpg by dourbalistar, on Flickr
Taipei-metro
Veteran
Sapporo City, Japan 日本 北海道 札幌市
1

2

3

Hokkaido, Japan
images by Taipei-metro
Pentax *ist DL (2007 APSC CCD)
Pentax SMC 18-55
media by Panasonic Japan msde
1

2

3

Hokkaido, Japan
images by Taipei-metro
Pentax *ist DL (2007 APSC CCD)
Pentax SMC 18-55
media by Panasonic Japan msde
jdriffill
Established
David Hughes
David Hughes
One of my first digiital photo's. Taken with the demo camera borrowed for a few days from the dealer. So 1997 or 1998.
I bought one, an Olympus C-1000L and as it had an instruction book with it I discovered I could turn out bigger (1024 x 768) pictures.
Later on (2001) I got the Olympus E-10 and just loved it:-
The problem for me with the earlier ones was the cost of the media and their small size.
I also realised I needed a small pocket camera and had a Fuji MX 1500.
Regards, David

I bought one, an Olympus C-1000L and as it had an instruction book with it I discovered I could turn out bigger (1024 x 768) pictures.
Later on (2001) I got the Olympus E-10 and just loved it:-

The problem for me with the earlier ones was the cost of the media and their small size.
I also realised I needed a small pocket camera and had a Fuji MX 1500.
Regards, David
Last edited:
Disappointed_Horse
Well-known
Nikon D40 (six whole megapixels)
85mm Micro-Nikkor DX
f/8, 1/1,250, ISO 200
Loves the colors from this old CCD sensor.
2020-06-19 DSC_4044 by Aaron Alfano, on Flickr
85mm Micro-Nikkor DX
f/8, 1/1,250, ISO 200
Loves the colors from this old CCD sensor.

Last edited:
Dogman
Veteran
The old CCD sensors sure produced some nice images. I might see if my old Nikon D200 still works.
pm1220
Member
This thread is perfect for my Canon G6 that was modified for IR years ago.

Disappointed_Horse
Well-known
https://35hunter.blog/ is a very good blog if you are interested in "digital classics."
Taipei-metro
Veteran
Osaka, Japan

2

Sapporo City, Hokkaido Japan
3

Tokyo, Japan
images by Taipei-metro
Pentax *ist DL (2007 APSC CCD)
Pentax 18-55 KiT

2

Sapporo City, Hokkaido Japan
3

Tokyo, Japan
images by Taipei-metro
Pentax *ist DL (2007 APSC CCD)
Pentax 18-55 KiT
Taipei-metro
Veteran
1

2

3

Arcadia, Los Angeles County pre Covid 19
images by Taipei-metro
Sony A200 (2008 APSC CCD)
Sony 18-70
media by SunDisk made in China
*i love this camera...Fast!

2

3

Arcadia, Los Angeles County pre Covid 19
images by Taipei-metro
Sony A200 (2008 APSC CCD)
Sony 18-70
media by SunDisk made in China
*i love this camera...Fast!
Archiver
Veteran
What a great thread. It really shows that the old cameras were more than capable of making great images.
The Canon S45 was my first digital camera, back in 2002. Almost all of the images on my flickr account from the S45 have no postprocessing.
Sunset 2 by Archiver, on Flickr
Flinder St by Night by Archiver, on Flickr
The S45 began my odyssey into full blown obsession with photography. After the S45 came the Canon S70 in 2005.
Peninsula Hotel in Hong Kong, 2006.
S70 - A Thousand Christmas Stars in Digital by Archiver, on Flickr
Long exposure in Sydney, near Anzac Bridge:
S70 - Anzac Bridge at Dawn [explore 2007 06 04 #72] by Archiver, on Flickr
The Fuji F30 in 2006 brought the remarkable Super CCD with unusual pixel layout. This gave better high ISO performance than other small sensors of that time.
Southbank in Melbourne.
F30 - Southbank by dusk comparison by Archiver, on Flickr
In Harbour City shopping centre in Hong Kong, 2008.
F30 - Azabu Sabo by Archiver, on Flickr
2006 also brought the Canon 30D with its 8mp aps-c sensor. At the time, I wondered why the heck I hadn't got a DSLR until then. The image quality compared with a small sensor camera was ridiculous.
Somewhere in Sydney, or maybe near the Blue Mountains. Being able to see the highlight details in the car park lighting was unheard of before I got this camera.
30D - Night is falling by Archiver, on Flickr
This year, I've started to use it again, and being able to use Lightroom properly has given new life to the old sensor.
Somewhere on the beach in the southeastern suburbs, probably near Rickett's Point. Canon EF-S 17-55mm f2.8.
30D - Single Swan by Archiver, on Flickr
Somewhere in Lakes Entrance. EF-S 17-55mm f2.8.
30D - The Rows by Archiver, on Flickr
But the sensor which really wowed me back then was the Sigma DP1 from 2008. Holy cow. The dynamic range, the pixel level acuity, the recoverable shadows and highlights, the wacky colours, it was like shooting slide film. That Foveon sensor was unique and incredible. I actually stopped using film as the DP1 gave me the experience of shooting film in a lot of ways.
Chinatown in Melbourne.
DP1 - Chinatown by Archiver, on Flickr
DP1 - Blue and Yellow [explore 2008 07 22 #484] by Archiver, on Flickr
Somewhere in Lakes Entrance.
DP1 - Hypercolour Agapanthas by Archiver, on Flickr
The Canon S45 was my first digital camera, back in 2002. Almost all of the images on my flickr account from the S45 have no postprocessing.


The S45 began my odyssey into full blown obsession with photography. After the S45 came the Canon S70 in 2005.
Peninsula Hotel in Hong Kong, 2006.

Long exposure in Sydney, near Anzac Bridge:

The Fuji F30 in 2006 brought the remarkable Super CCD with unusual pixel layout. This gave better high ISO performance than other small sensors of that time.
Southbank in Melbourne.

In Harbour City shopping centre in Hong Kong, 2008.

2006 also brought the Canon 30D with its 8mp aps-c sensor. At the time, I wondered why the heck I hadn't got a DSLR until then. The image quality compared with a small sensor camera was ridiculous.
Somewhere in Sydney, or maybe near the Blue Mountains. Being able to see the highlight details in the car park lighting was unheard of before I got this camera.

This year, I've started to use it again, and being able to use Lightroom properly has given new life to the old sensor.
Somewhere on the beach in the southeastern suburbs, probably near Rickett's Point. Canon EF-S 17-55mm f2.8.

Somewhere in Lakes Entrance. EF-S 17-55mm f2.8.

But the sensor which really wowed me back then was the Sigma DP1 from 2008. Holy cow. The dynamic range, the pixel level acuity, the recoverable shadows and highlights, the wacky colours, it was like shooting slide film. That Foveon sensor was unique and incredible. I actually stopped using film as the DP1 gave me the experience of shooting film in a lot of ways.
Chinatown in Melbourne.


Somewhere in Lakes Entrance.

R
Richard Plume
Guest
pm1220
Member
Canon G6 IR converted

Taipei-metro
Veteran
1

2
Taipei to

Los Angeles
3

Sapporo City, Japan
images by Taipei-metro
Kodak Z730 (point n shoot CCD 2007)
Schneider K 5.5-22mm (36-144 eqv) F2.8-5.6

2
Taipei to

Los Angeles
3

Sapporo City, Japan
images by Taipei-metro
Kodak Z730 (point n shoot CCD 2007)
Schneider K 5.5-22mm (36-144 eqv) F2.8-5.6
kmallick
Well-known
Fat CCD pixels from Pentax *ist D
And one more from Oly E510

And one more from Oly E510

fdarnell
Well-known
Olympus Colors: EP-1, 35mm pancake

Very cool thread...
Austintatious
Well-known
Panasonic FZ1 with a two mega pixel sensor. The lens was branded Leica.

Your Wish is my Command. by Carlos Yashinon, on Flickr

Your Wish is my Command. by Carlos Yashinon, on Flickr
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