5D testing so far
Posted: Thu May 11, 2006 2:29 pm
Well I’ve been testing a 5D for a few days now, 24-70mm and 85mm f1.2. The 5D is a very nice camera. It’s not particularly fast, but for what I do, it would fit right in.
One thing that really stands out is the bright viewfinder. Really nice if manual focusing in low light is your thing. And low light performance is excellent. The resolution is not really noticeable over what I already use, but that is something for a 16x20 print test (which I’m not bothered to do).
Being able to use your entire lens has its advantages and disadvantages, and those are well documented. But if I shoot wide open, the corners are OOF anyway, so not a big deal. If I was to shoot landscapes or something like that, your fast expensive glass losses some appeal as you need to stop it down to deal with vignetting. But the thing is you need to pro glass to handle corner sharpness. So it’s a bit of a catch 22. But in all reality, I could easily live with this camera; so far…
The problem for me comes with the ergonomics. Using Nikon based cameras for year have broken me toward Canon button/function layout. Some things are so hard to do, that are easy in Nikon based cameras.
I’ll have it for another day but as my thinking-out-loud has highlighted (thanks guys) that if I didn’t have that much of an investment in Nikon glass, then it’d be a no-brianer. Secondly, the Fuji S4 is due for announcement in September. And I’m always amazed by the Fuji S3 RAW files, and hope the S4 will continue the progression.
One thing that really stands out is the bright viewfinder. Really nice if manual focusing in low light is your thing. And low light performance is excellent. The resolution is not really noticeable over what I already use, but that is something for a 16x20 print test (which I’m not bothered to do).
Being able to use your entire lens has its advantages and disadvantages, and those are well documented. But if I shoot wide open, the corners are OOF anyway, so not a big deal. If I was to shoot landscapes or something like that, your fast expensive glass losses some appeal as you need to stop it down to deal with vignetting. But the thing is you need to pro glass to handle corner sharpness. So it’s a bit of a catch 22. But in all reality, I could easily live with this camera; so far…
The problem for me comes with the ergonomics. Using Nikon based cameras for year have broken me toward Canon button/function layout. Some things are so hard to do, that are easy in Nikon based cameras.
I’ll have it for another day but as my thinking-out-loud has highlighted (thanks guys) that if I didn’t have that much of an investment in Nikon glass, then it’d be a no-brianer. Secondly, the Fuji S4 is due for announcement in September. And I’m always amazed by the Fuji S3 RAW files, and hope the S4 will continue the progression.