8.05.2010

Kirk's personal review of the Canon 7D and some lenses.



Let's get the persnickety housekeeping stuff out of the way:  when I review a camera I'm basically telling you what I think it does well and what it does less well.  I'm telling you how it fits in the hands of a five foot, eight inch tall guy.  I'm subconsciously and consciously comparing the camera or the lens to all the hundreds of cameras I've bought, borrowed and used over the last 25 years.  I'm not going to do technical testing.  If you need to know how fast the camera powers up or how many grams the thing weighs or exactly where the noise falls on a scale you'll probably want to supplement my ramblings with some largely objective measures from a site like www.dpreview.com.  Just do yourself a favor and stay out of the forums; it can get pretty savage in there.......

First a bit of history that will, in a tangential sort of way, explain how I ended up with a Canon 7D in my hands and what the thought process was.

Last Summer I was shooting everything with Olympus cameras and lenses.  I liked them and they worked fine for most of the stuff I shot.  I was thinking (incorrectly) that the bulk of our work was heading for the web and that the 12 megapixels and overly agressive anti-aliasing filters of the current Olympus cameras wouldn't present a problem.  But then the economy started to recover in Austin.  My favorite art directors started to re-discover the joys of designing double truck (two page) spreads in their advertising work and my favorite graphic designers started designing wrap around brochure covers and spec'ing really nice,  high res offset printing on their projects.  I'd shot something this Spring in the studio for my biggest client and he called me to talk about technical issues.  (A very rare occurrence as most AD's don't care what gear you use as long as it works for them.....).  He mentioned that he was comparing what I'd just shot for him with some stuff we'd shot a year earlier using a Kodak SLR/n  (full frame, 14 megapixels) and told me that the Kodak stuff was much, much sharper and more detailed.  He also mentioned that he'd just shot in Dallas with a photographer who was using a Canon 5Dmk2 and the evidence of magnificent detail in the files was obvious.  He went straight for the juglar.  He said,  "I'm not going to tell you how to run your business ( a lead up that almost guarantees that someone is going to tell you how to run your business )  but, if your files aren't as detailed as those I'm getting from these other suppliers I'm going to have to send more business to them."  

Before the surly and self-righteous among you scream into the comments that I shouldn't let this person dictate to me I want to mention that he paid me enough in fees in a bad year to buy a nice new car......and he's been one of my best friends for the better part of 20 years.  It's the first time he's given me direct, technically inspired business advice.  And,  in retrospect, my pessimism led me to believe the market was heading in a direction (the web) that didn't match what was happening on the ground in my part of the market.  We're still kicking out a bunch of print....and a lot of it is big print.
I love the quick screens on the new generation of cameras.


I immediately went camera shopping.  I bought a Canon 5Dmk2 for three main reasons:  1.  It was cheap compared to all the other high resolution options (I looked at the Sony's but didn't like the limited choice of optics or the lack of video...).  2.  All of my professional photographer friends shoot Canon and like it a lot. And they (my friends)  are a rich source of gear loans.  They've got T/S lenses, weird wide angles and so much more.  3.  I could put together a system that worked for me without worrying about when they might get around to refreshing the products I'm most interested in.

I've worked with the client many times since then and he sees a big difference in the files.  I admit I'm impressed by the files from the 5Dmk2 as well.  I still shoot a lot of stuff with my Olympus Pen cameras and I always pack an e1 when I'm shooting in the rain, but............there is something fundamentally different about a lot of pixels.  You really see a difference in file detail if you do your craft right.  That means careful focus, good lenses, shooting at optimum f-stops, using tripods when necessary, etc.

I've made my money back on whatever I spent for the Canon stuff and that's the way it should work in a professional business.  But for a while I carried both systems with me on jobs because I think it's not professional to shoot deadline intensive work without a back-up strategy.  Kinda dumb though, to carry a full back up system of non-compatible gear.  And wow,  those SHG lenses get heavy quick.

I knew I needed to get a Canon to back up the Canon and to shoot with when I shoot with two different lenses at the same time.  I didn't want to blow the rest of my budget and get another 5Dmk2 so I started looking at cheaper alternatives.  I almost got a Rebel T2i.....until I held it in my hands and looked thru the finder.  I almost bought a used 40D but they use different batteries than the 5D2.  Then I started reading about the 7D and it seemed just right.  When I held one in my hands I was sold.

I should mention that I thought about buying a used original 5D but the LCD is just awful and the handling seemed kludgy compared to the new model.

I bought mine at Precision Camera, here in Austin, because they quoted me a price that was lower than B&H and Calumet,  I could walk out the door with the camera in my hand,  go back to them if I needed service, and finally I knew that the bulk of the money I spent there would go right back into my own community.  And into our local tax base.  And to my child's school.  Etc.
The button on the top left is the quick menu selection button
and the button next to it is an immediate raw+ or Jpeg+ button
for one frame special captures.


But none of this explains why I like the 7D so much and reach for it before I reach for the 5D2 almost every time (there are exceptions...).  That's what this review is for.  First off I'll mention one of my favorite things about this class of camera (and that includes the equivalent model from Nikon, the D300s) I love the way the shutter sounds and feels when it goes off.  It's muted,  it has very, very low vibration, and it seems quicker in it's action than the full frame camera shutters.  I never liked the sound and feel of the Nikon D700 shutter by comparison and I'm equally unfond of the "feel" of the Canon 5D2 shutter as well.

The much smaller size and weight of the 7D (and Nikon 300s) shutter, while housed in a body with even more mass than the 5D2 means that the whole device feels more solid and stable than the full frame cameras.  This makes me believe that the camera is more responsive and, by dint of it's higher perceived rigidity, more stable during the exposure which might lead to sharper results, all things considered.  Notice that I say "The much smaller size and weight of the 7D shutter..."  but not the body itself.  If you weigh them the 7D is actually just a bit heavier than the 5.  Better construction?  It feels like it.  But that may be my subjective prejudice coming to the fore.

Now to all the little things.  Ken Rockwell makes a big deal about how much better the power switch is on the 7D.  I immediately agree,  the three position combination locking and power switch on the 5D2 is fiddly and to small.  It requires too much leverage on such a small control.  Makes me think I'll accidentally break it some day.  Funny how the position and feel of one tiny switch can change your feelings about a camera.

The next thing most people notice is how good the LCD screen on the back of the camera is.  This is a neutral for me vis-a-vis the Nikon D700 I used to own.  It too had a brilliant screen.  Coming from the Olympus e3 though it was a big step forward.  You can actually use it to judge sharpness and focus with.  Nice.
One button stop/start for video recording.  I like that.


One thing that makes me happy to use most cameras produced in the last few years (Nikon and Olympus included) is the inclusion of quick menu or data screens.  You push a button on the back of the camera and all of the most commonly needed settings appear in one screen and can be easily set from that one screen.  Beats the hell out of the old days when you'd have to scroll around through menus to find the stuff you needed.  But I can't put a star in the "glorious" column for the Canon since it's quick screen date display and implementation is no better or worse than those in a number of other cameras.

I'm very happy Canon included on "on camera" flash and I'm even happier they made it able to control off camera flashes in the same way Nikon uses the built in flash on the D300 to control their CLS flash system.  I use it, along with a 580 EX2 to do simple lighting set ups with a single off camera light blasting into a large, white umbrella as a main light source for quick portraits.  People can talk all they want about how much better one companies flash control is compared to another companies flash control but it's all moot to me.  I use the flashes on manual, usually at 1/2 or 1/4 power.  All flashes seem equally good on manual.  As long as they trigger the rest is up to me.  The Canon off camera flash control system has a totally different menu interface than the Nikon or Olympus and it's not nearly as clear and obvious.  If you are buying the system primarily to use off camera flash controlled by the 7D be prepared to drag along the manuals for both the flash and the camera on the first five or six shoots,  just to be safe.

I practiced it all in the studio until I was comfortable with the set up.  Even then I made a series of laminated notecards with the major steps on them to carry in my camera bag.  None of this really matters if you are using the camera with a dedicated TTL cord or using the flash directly in the hot shoe of the camera.  You just use it the same way we've been using TTL flash since digital came along.  That is:  take a test frame, dial in some correction one way or the other and start shooting.  I've been a proponent of Jpeg as a standard use file format since I started shooting Olympus cameras but when it comes to flash and paying clients I always shoot RAW for the extra insurance it provide.

One neat thing about an attached Canon flash and the 7D (also on the 5D2) is the ability to see and control all the things on the flash menu on the LCD screen of the camera.  You get more information and can make clearer choices when setting up the flash via the camera.  I'm also happy to have an admittedly antiquated PC terminal on the camera.  Having a desperation back-up for the regular hot shoe is very nice and I sometimes grab for an old fashion sync cord when too many cell phones and Nextel radio phones are messing with my radio flash triggers on location.  (Quick note:  I did a demo at a college photo class last month.  Noticing that I used Elinchrom lights the instructor pulled me  aside during a break and let me know that they were having a lot of trouble with misfires and non-fires with their Elinchroms and the radio Skyports.  I asked for a show of hands of people who's cellphones were on and live at the time.  It was 15 for 15.  We tried the flashes and were able to duplicate the problems.  I asked everyone to turn off their cells and we tried again.  100% flash trigger performance!  No misfires.  I don't know why but this is what worked.  If you have trouble with your radio triggers the first thing to check after the batteries is radio interference.  My next guess would have been ER from the banks of florescent lights.....).

The 7D's smaller, faster shutter syncs at 1/250th.   Makes fill flash and sunlight a bit easier.  I'd still carry around a two stop ND filter if you do a lot of that kind of work.  If you like shooting HS you'll want to hunt down the menu control that allows the camera to do HS.  It's under the first menu on the left of the row of menus.  Look for "flash control".

All the usual stuff for flash is available: first curtain/second curtain,  changing parameters for minimum and maximum sync speed, dialing in compensation (which you can do on the "quick" menu) and all the rest.  Most of it is meaningless to me except the HS flash.  I have been doing a lot of that in the last week or so.  That also makes me happy to have ISO 100 but I would prefer the ISO 50 I can get on the 5D2 if I do much HS in earnest....
Yummy.  A dedicated locking button instead of the confusing arrangement on the Canon 5D2.


Let me tell you three things that this camera does very, very well.  1.  Autofocus.  It rocks.  It's so much faster and surer than previous Canon cameras.  It more customizable than any of my Olympus cameras and the integration of graphical information on the focusing screen is great.  So far, every lens I've tried on this particular picture taking machine locks in quickly and accurately.  But you might want to take what I'm saying with a grain of salt and try it yourself if you are a sports shooter.  I tend to stick with single focus points,  mostly in the middle,  and shoot on "S" single frame with "one shot" AF.  I have tried the AI autofocus setting on continuous in a dark theater with fast action and was happy to see that the lens focus followed the subject and locked in every shot with perfect focus.  I can't speak to football or race cars because I don't do that.  I like that you can change the strength of the tracking focus lock on and make it more or less responsive to abrupt changes (like someone moving between your camera and your main subject) but again,  not something I do a lot of.  2.  Frame rate.  Kind of a corollary to autofocus but the frame rate is fast, fast, fast which means the viewfinder "black out" time is well minimized.  I think a faster frame rate and a lower black out time go hand in hand with the smaller sensor geometry and the lower mass of all the associated mechanisms.  3.  Battery life.  It just goes on forever.  If you take Canon at their word and you do the full drain and recharge cycle three times before you use the camera in earnest, you'll find that the batteries can last up to 2,000 frames.  That's only true if you don't "chimp" a lot, use the read LCD as an iPad substitute or shoot a lot of video.  But if you use the camera as we film cameras, with little review,  the battery life is superb.  The charger is also very good, gives you more complete info that most other makers and does it's job quickly.  I like that the charger has a folding plug and doesn't require a cord.

Anyone who uses this camera will probably tell you they have the same favorite feature.  And that would be handling.  It fits my hands perfectly.  It shoots perfectly and it feels solid and reliable.  People who don't handle cameras all the time don't get why this is such an important parameter to me.  But honestly,  I'll take a camera with worse ISO performance or less resolution rather than work with a camera that doesn't quickly become intuitive and ortho-adaptive.  A camera should settle into your hand in a way that doesn't leave a nagging feeling that a control should be moved over half an  inch or a button should be in a different spot.  The stuff I use is where I think it should be and the stuff I don't use stays far enough out of the way that it doesn't cause me any trouble.  

People laughed when I said I gave up the Nikon D700 because it lacked soul.  What I really meant was that the camera just didn't feel right for me.  There wasn't the people/machine connection that comes from a camera that's been rigorously designed for feel instead of just raw function.  In some ways I regret selling the D700 because the files were really good.  But I just never warmed up to holding it and shooting it.  I always reached for the D300.  I love the files I get from the Kodak SLR/n but the ergonomics are porcine and medieval compared to the older Kodak DCS 760.

The Olympus e1 may be the sexiest camera I've ever held if you are judging a camera solely on feel.  Light years ahead of the e3.  And I'm sure in each of these examples someone will say that they feel just the opposite way.  They may be right for them but no for me.

In the Canon line the 7D is the current camera with soul.  The shutter sound is satisfying.  The finder is fine.  The feel of the body is like solid steel in your hand.  The buttons are just right.  It's got the feel that eludes the 5D2.  I'm willing to be that the 1D series of cameras is in the same ball park but the cost to someone who doesn't abuse their bodies is just too high.  

But just because the 7D has soul doesn't mean it's files are magical.  The 5Dmk2 is a much better file producer.  When I compare raw to raw in the Lightroom 3 I can see smoother gradations, higher sharpness and more resolution in the 5.  With both cameras set to ISO 100 the differences are slight but they are still there.  The 7D files are just a little harsher.  Harsher?  Yes.  Harsher.  The 5D2 files are smoother and accept manipulation with more grace.  All things being equal the 5 wins in every category.  But the differences aren't enormous.  If you didn't have the files side by side in the same raw converter chances are you wouldn't notice the differences.

Our blessing and curse is that humans are great visual comparators.  We can see incredibly fine differences in color and texture when two objects are placed side by side.  Incredibly subtle nuances.  But take away the ability to do direct, side by side comparisons and you're in a whole different ballgame.  We accomodate quickly to single samples and our mind makes them whole.  It's the same thing as being in a room lit entirely with green florescents.  Our eyes, or rather, our brains quickly make an accommodation that makes the light appear neutral. It's the same thing with cameras.  In the absence of comparators all cameras look pretty good.  It's only when you compare them with identical images taken with other cameras that you begin to really notice color shifts and noise signatures.  

All that being said, the 7D is not far behind the 5D2 in quality.  I feel comfortable shooting the 7D at ISO 800 and I feel totally comfortable shooting it's big sister at 1600.  They can both go higher and they both become less than perfect.  But, for me, high ISO performance isn't nearly as important as it might be to a nightclub photographer or a photojournalist.  I've had the 5d2 since April and the only shoots that haven't been done on a tripod or with supplemental lighting are the technical dress rehearsal shoots I do for Zachary Scott Theater.  That's about once a month.  Tops.  The rest of the time high ISO just never comes up.  If I compared the 7 to the 5.2 at 6400 ISO I'm sure I'd see a huge difference.  But that's not the stuff I do.

My jobs go like this:  Go on location.  Set up lights, diffusers, giant softboxes, things that personalize my vision.  Set camera at the slowest ISO I can (commensurate with the best file characteristics....) and blaze away.  Or, go on location in the great Texas outdoors and sync up a big flash and blow away the sunlight.  Usually with ISO 100 and a two stop ND attached to the front of the lens.  High ISO?  Don't think so.

Head to head, at more Burgheresque ISO's I find the 5.2 files to be a bit more detailed and nuanced.  I use it for everything that's got to be big and perfect.  The rest of the time I reach for the 7D.  It works better.  For me.

Here's how I use it:  The 7D loves three lenses and I'm gonna bet it's a long spell between new lens adventures.  My "go-to" lens is the zonky 15mm-85mm f3.5 to 5.6.  It's sharp but it vignettes like black paper wrapped around the end of the lens and it's got more curvature than Madonna.  So why am I remotely interested in the lens and why do I like it so?  First of all, it looks cool.  Bad reason?  Yeah.  But it's also the equivalent of a 24 to 136 mm zoom that's pretty darn sharp, wide open on each end even more so thru the middle.  And, if you are using the latest rev of Photoshop or ACR or Lightroom or the Canon software you have at your fingertips automatic correction of the things you might not like about the lens.  Push one button and the software fixes most of the geometric issues while evening out the exposure to the edges.  This is something that Nikon's newest cameras are capable of doing on the fly but I'm just as happy to do it in software.  Truth be told, I'm not averse to a bit of creative vignetting.....

The attribute that makes this lens a real keeper, though, is it's impressive Image Stabilization.  I don't have anyway to measure the real accomplishments of this system other than to say that I'm able to get a number of keepers at exposure times all the way down to 1/8th of a second.  It's pretty credible performance and works as long as the subject's not moving too much.  

It's important to say that I spend a lot of time and energy shooting portraits and I like the look of a sharp subject surrounded by a softer background.  I don't spend a lot of time analyzing the corner performance of any of my lenses.  If I shot architecture like my friend Paul Bardagjy I'd do what he does and spend time finding the optics that are sharp across the full field.  Then I guess my favorite lenses would be tilt shifts and flat field wide angles.  And, like Paul, I'd spend more time buying up Zeiss and Leica R lenses and adapting them to the Canon cameras.  Okay.  Enough on the 15-85mm.  It might be an acquired taste, like anchovies and brussel sprouts.
Yes.  A traditional flash sync, PC connection is provided.

My next favorite lens/tool is the EFS 60 mm macro.  If you are new to Canon or you've always shot full frame you might want to know that EFS lenses are made specifically for the smaller sensor cameras and won't even mount on the full frame models.  I like what Nikon did with their APS lenses on full frame bodies.  The just show the smaller APS size crop in the finished files.  Works great in a pinch but not available on the Canons.  

The 60mm focal length is the equivalent of a 96mm on a full frame camera.  I like the focal length and I like the fact that this lens is sharp wide open (and I mean very, very sharp) and has really nice contrast and resolution.  Currently, this lens and my 100mm f2 (on the 5D) are my two favorite portrait lenses.  The focusing is silent and quick.  My one complaint?  I wish it came with Image Stabilization.

Rounding out my lens choices for this part of the system is the 70mm-200mm f4 L zoom lens.  I works equally well on both full frame and APS-C cameras and provides a lot of reach with very little weight and bulk.  I've owned everyone's 70-200mm f2.8's and I'm so over the weight and the intimidating appearance, not to mention the cost of the behemoths.  At f4 this lens rocks.   It's about as sharp as you can make a zoom lens and it's not much bigger than a 100mm 2.8 macro lens.  Erwin puts once wrote an article about lens design that gave me pause.  (He's an expert in Leica lens design...)  He explained that for every one stop increase you must increase the front element diameter by a factor of two.  The engineering requirements to get the same precision grind and finishing tend to increase by a factor of 8 for every doubling of effective aperture in a given focal length.  The bigger the front element the tougher the manufacturing process.  In other words it's easy to make slower glass much sharper and much better for a lot less money that faster glass.  The 70-200 f4 is a shining example of this principle as are most macro lenses which tend to be slow but sharp and evenly illuminated across the frame.  I don't dread carrying this lens around with me during the day the way I dread carrying around the Olympus 35-100mm f2.  The slower Canon lens even fits into the standard pockets of my Domke camera bag.

I bought the Canon tripod collar for this lens since I was unwilling to spend twice as much money to get the IS version of the lens.  It balances beautifully and I've been very happy with all the images I get with this combination.  On the 7D it gives me a reach of 112mm to 320mm at f4.  I'm happy with that although I don't find many situations in which to use the longest focal lengths.  And the lens is white which reflects heat.  It's a good lens all the way around.  

While the rest of my Canon stuff works on the 7D some of it becomes less useful, like the 85mm 1.8, which I love on the 5d2 and have no feeling for on the smaller sensor camera.  Ditto the 20mm lens.  I can't get over the feeling that I'd be compromising on resolution with the 20mm.....

So,  the files are pretty good.  At least on par with its direct competitor, the Nikon 300s.  The high ISO's are very decent for a small sensor, 18 megapixel camera.  It responds quickly and diligently.  It feels perfect in my hands.  I've found some lenses I really like to use on it.  It's pretty cheap compared to the Nikon D2x's and Kodaks and big Canons I've dropped change on over the years.  The finder is the best I've seen in the smaller framed cameras.  So what have I left out?

I saved the best for last.  I know.  I know.  All of you are "pure" photographers and you think that video sucks and we should demand that they take it out of our cameras and stop charging us for it.  But you're wrong.  At least as far as my business and my art are concerned.  I'm finally starting to wrap my head around the multidisciplinary nature of our business going forward.  And that means wrapping my head around the tools as well.  This is the best DSLR video camera on the market today.  I like it better, out of the box, than the Canon 5D2 because it's easier to use as a video camera.  There's on button to set and push on the back.  Once you've enabled video and set the desired resolution and frame rate all you have to do is push one button on the back of the camera to start and stop the video.  You'll want a Hoodman or Zacuto loupe so you'll be able to watch the footage your shooting on the rear LCD.  You can shoot in full manual or with as much automation as you'd like.  But you'll probably want to do your focusing before you start rolling because the camera is not going to do follow focus on it's own like a dedicated video camera.

The footage is clean and highly detailed.  I can make the camera "jello" if I pan quickly but like the doctor says, "If it hurts when you do that, stop doing that."  This camera, coupled with a good microphone is a formidable video making machine.  So much so that Dirck Halstead's Platypus Workshop (video training, week long boot camp) will be using the 7D as their camera of choice in their classes this year.  I've been using mine with a Rode VideoMic and it's pretty darn good.  Most of my projects are little ones that we've been editing on iMovie but they sure look great on client websites, via vimeo.

If you think that you're getting a camera that's pretty much light years ahead of nearly all cameras more than two years old and you're getting monster good video performance in one water resistant, dust resistant, easy to handle package you'll come to realize that this camera is one of the bright points of the current market.  I haven't played with the new Nikon D300s but I'm betting I'd like that as well.

So this whole journey started because I was looking for a sensible back up to a 5Dmk2.  I wanted a camera I could swap batteries with.  I wanted something with pretty high resolution for those shoot with the client who pushed me to go higher res.  And I wanted something I would enjoy using alongside the 5D2 when I was shooting multiple cameras.  I think this pretty well fills the bill.  Much as I like the 7D I think, in retrospect, that it would have made a lot more sense just to buy a second 5Dmk2.  Then the body functions and the menu choices would be indentical.  I'd also be backing up with the same quality as my primary camera.  That would make a lot more sense.  But I'm rarely sensible.  And in my pig headedness I've discovered a camera that is robust enough for tough play.  Has enough resolution to keep nearly anyone happy and has given me a more efficient video rig.  I'm not going to switch now.  But I do reserve the right to add a second 5 (or a 1DS mk 4) at any time.


People seem to like "pro and con" lists so here I am at my pickiest:

Cons.  

1.  I wish it had all the mechanical performance and specs (8 fps, fast AF) but with the full frame 21 megapixel sensor.....

2.  When I'm in a hurry it's still hard to hunt down the setting for HS flash with an external flash unit.

3.  I have to use faster, UDMA CF cards to get the full speed performance and write performance that the camera is capable of.  Don't expect a deep raw file buffer if you are using a slower card!!!!!!!!!!!!

4.  I wish the AF settings were more intuitive.  I might use more of them.  But maybe not.

5.  I would like to have a second card slot.  And I'd like it to be a CF instead of an SD slot.  The camera takes CF's now but I know the pro models also have a secondary slot that uses SD.

6.  Here's my biggest complaint!!!!!!  Unlike Nikon and Olympus, Canon won't let you rename the files in the camera.  I used to rename my Nikon files in a way that showed what camera they came from. If all the camera names were different there was never the chance that I'd have identical file names in my computer folders.  Canon lets you do custom names on their 1Dxxxx version cameras but not on any of the others.  I think this royally sucks.  Yeah.  Yeah.  I know you can rename them in some programs.  Just what I need, one more step in post.  One more app to keep up with.  One more labeling system to devise.  We've talked about it before and a bunch of the IT guys got really excited about telling me how to proceed with the post processing rename.  It just cemented their stature as nerds.  The cameras can do this.  The Canon people just want to punish us for owning two of their non-professional cameras at a time.......  Stop enabling them.

Edit:  Saturday afternoon.  Reader and blog member,  Gordon supplied us with a url that will take you to a Canon document.  Gordon wrote a cheat sheet that explains Canon's mysterious flash menu.  Go here to download:  http://www.usa.canon.com/dlc/controller?act=GetArticleAct&articleID=3466  Many thanks!!!  KT

Pros: 

1.  It's a sexy body.  It feels good in my hand.  Looks good on the strap.  Nice curves.  Good buttons.  

2.  Fast reflexes, fast throughput (with UDMA cards) and very responsive handling.  Hmmmm. Maybe it's an AMG Ford Fusion..... Some kind of mixed car metaphor.

3.  The files are really, really good.  Especially if you keep the revs,  I mean the ISO, under 800.  

3a.  Not bad at 1600 ISO either.

4.  Love the built in flash that doubles as a wireless flash controller.  

5.  The trade off to a smaller sensor means that the shutter sounds nicer, works faster and causes less shake.  Gotta love that.

6.  Here's my biggest positive point.......This is the best $6,000 video camera you can get for under $2,000 dollars.

7.  Great battery life.

8.  Weather and dust gaskets.  Try not to spill but if you do maybe you won't cry...

9.  The meter is right on the money in most situations.

10.  I could watch movies on the screen.  It's so good.

Final recommendation?  Have lots of cash?  Need the highest quality you can get your hands on?  Do you work carefully and with good photocraft skills?  Are you already a great photographer? Are you highly critical of my choices?  Then stop reading this and buy yourself a Leica S2.  But if you need a great camera for most normal stuff and you're sloppy sometimes and you drink too much coffee and your spouse has you on a restricted optical mechanical budget.......this is a pretty darn convincing camera.  I've made some good money with mine.  I'll probably make some more before I'm through with it.  And when it gets superseded as a still camera I'll keep it around for more video....Final summation:  a Canon DSLR with legitimate soul.  I'd buy it again.

I'll stick some photos in tomorrow.  Stay tuned for my Leica M9+35mm Summilux (yes, the model that got released in July of this year......)  Best, Kirk

An incredible play at Zach Scott Theater.

The people at Zach Scott Theater are knocking em out of the ballpark left and right.  This is a still from the dress rehearsal of a play called, Metamorphosis,  which I describe as part, "The Lightning Thief",  part "Circe du Soleil" and part just amazing.  Canon 5Dmk2  24-105mm lens.


They tried everything they could to make this play hard to photograph but wonderful to watch.  To begin with there's a swimming pool in the middle of the stage.  Not a wading pool.  A big ass, custom constructed, five feet deep pool with a walk way all around the top.  Most of the action happens in the pool or is central to the pool  Next, they made the lighting fleeting, creative and exciting.  Get a light reading and it's already changed.  I rode the shutter control on the camera like a race car driver banking into curves.

The theater is in the round but I could only be on one half.  And the action constantly moved and presented in different directions.  Thank goodness for running shoes.  People dropped from the ceiling on silk fabric and climbed back up again.  Amidst the pools of light and the light from the pool there were inky acres of blackness.  You can't flash so you have to take what you can get and make a flaming dessert from it.

Here's my recipe:  Canon 5D2 at 3200 (1600 if I could pull it off).  24-105mm lens because I needed both ends.  Now.  Locked at f4.  Don't care if it's sharper at 5.6, I didn't have the photons to go there.  Captain, engage the IS!!!!  Vacillated between AWB and tungsten, depending on the lighting.

We shot all the way through and came away with 1600 images.  I narrowed it down to 800 and burned it to a disk for the art director.  Now I'm looking forward to coming back on opening night and seeing this play the right way.  What's the right way?  How about:  with my wife,  a nice glass of wine and a couple of good seats.  And no reloading CF cards mid-drama.

Go see some theater.  These guys light different than us and it's really cool.

8.02.2010

Just showing up for work.

Kirk in his hardhat,  reflective vest, eye protection, etc.  Just another day at work.
We love to think we do art 24/7 but sometimes we put on the hard hat and vest and go to work.  For the last eight days I've been working on an annual report project, shooting portraits outdoors.  Mostly on road construction sites.  Today I photographed the people who operate the big machine you see in the background.  We're down in a new roadway with no shade and no electricity.  At 11:30 this morning, around the time my client snapped this shot of me, it was already in the mid 90's (f).

My lighting set up for the images was pretty simple.  I floated a scrim over the top of the subject and used an Acute 600b in a small softbox, as close in as I possibly could.  When I get permission I'll show a few of the sample images.  I've been using the Canon 7D with the 15-85mm zoom as my primary optic.  Why?  Because the lens covers all the focal lengths I need on this project which means I'm not changing lenses in the middle of the dust storm that is road construction.  Also, we're shooting in strong daylight which means middle to smaller apertures.  No need for big, high speed lenses in this context.  The camera body seems well sealed against dust and rain. (Actually used it in the rain last week.....)  

The one accessory that makes all the difference in the world on a bright, outdoor shoot like this is the Hoodman viewing loupe which covers the LCD on the back of the camera and lets me and the art director make a good assessment of the image we're working on.  It's a must if you judge exposure by looking at your review image but it also helps you see the histogram results.

As the project progresses I've been selecting my favorite images and having them printed at 12 by 18 inches by my local Costco.  So far, so good.  It's fun to look at prints instead of trying to judge everything from a monitor.  I think it's a good practice to make daily selections and send out for prints as you go along on a project.  If you do it routinely through every project you'll find that you have a big stack of portfolio ready prints in no time.  You can go thru your stack and edit down to a perfectly aimed portfolio, every time.  If you go through the process of making the files ready to print you can save them in folders and then print your own if you enjoy the pain of doing your own inkjet printing.

I'm seeing a high degree of sharpness and detail in all the prints.  There are obviously lenses that are better correctly than the 15-85 and there are lenses that are much faster.  But given the conditions we're shooting in and the results we're getting at our final printing size I will say I'm satisfied with the quality.  Everything is a compromise.  Simplicity is a good compromise.

I've also been getting a lot of use out of the Canon 580 EX2 flash.  I use it when we try to get images in almost inaccessible locations,  like inside a bucket lift thirty feet up or in the cab of a $3 million earth moving machine.  I use it mostly to add fill light in the HS mode (high speed sync) which allows me to sync the flash at shutter speeds up to 1/8000th of a second.  I use a very small softbox on the front and tend to always filter it with a quarter CTO filter so that when I do the final color correction for my human subjects the sky in the background does a deeper, richer shade of blue.

Well. I'm getting ready to go out and get the last shot of the job this afternoon.  It's already a little over 100 degrees out there.  I've got on my steel toed Redwings, a Royal Robbins long sleeve, UV blocking technical shirt,  a pair of Khaki shorts, my straw cowboy hat and, of course my vintage RayBan sunglasses on.  That takes care of me.  There's a case of water in the car for the subjects and entourage.  And a small step ladder.  Just another day at work.









7.31.2010

Why are we so preoccupied with new work?


In an e-mail recently another photographer took me to task for showing work that I'd done in years past.  I understand the fascination with new gear and all things digital but photography didn't just start in 2003 or whenever it was that Canon introduced the D30 and Nikon introduced the D100.  Nope.  Many people were taking photographs even earlier than that.  And we're not anxious to relegate everything that we did before last year to the deep archives.

In fact, if you look at the work of Robert Frank in, The Americans, you'll see that people were doing great work before I was even born.  And to ignore it is a form of "hyper present time" chauvinism.  In fact, I'd conjecture that before people were inundated with social media, cable TV, cellphones and instantaneous news they actually had a lot more time to work on their hobbies, their passions and their core professions.  It may be that the 1950's and 1960's (before my time as a photographer) gave birth to nearly all the social constructs and road marks we hold dear as a culture today because their focus was more intense and more acute.  Their time less fragmented.  Their anxiety less lethal.  Their lack of pressing and immersive contact may have given artists of that age the space they needed to understand themselves and by extension their relationship to their vision and their art.  A golden age of humanistic introspection mirrored by art?

Why else would the Beatles and the Rollingstones still be relevant?  Why else would Robert Frank, Henri Cartier Bresson and Richard Avedon still be influencing each successive, educated generation of would be photographic artists?  With the exception of Annie Leibovitz (who arguably straddles that generation and my generation) can you honestly name a new artist working today as a photographer who has even a small percentage of the influence and sway of so many image makers from the age before hyper cultural consumption?

I'm not saying that this snapshot I took of Ben, with a Contax G2 and a 45mm lens, on Tri-x film, is in the same league as David Bailey, Irving Penn or Victor Skrebneski but I am making the assertion that almost all of the work we see today is entirely derived from a generation that's passed and left a legacy that we've yet to match.

Argue all you want but today's carbon fiber cellos and violins don't compete with the instruments made over a century ago by Stradivarius and today's frenetic lighting geeks don't hold a candle to the work done by men of their grandfather's generation.  Sure, there will be exceptions that people will put forward, but it's almost as if we're in the middle of a de-evolution of photography, which is braced up and given credence by the ease with which the masses can achieve technical proficiency.

I've said it before and I'll repeat it here, crowd sourcing art on a grand scale, with an inexhaustible feedback loop, serves to homogenize vision and rationalize a pervasive complicity wherein everyone copies everyone else to gain a universal sense of approval.  That's why each day's "style of the day" goes viral by the end of the day.  The quote from Dash, in the movie, The Incredibles, says it best,  "When everyone is special, no one is...." (paraphrased).

If you are an Ayn Randian you've come to know that phrase as being the distillation of 1100 pages of, Atlas Shrugged.

Am I saying that nothing new can be done and that we should close the patent office?  Of course not, but while I am being hyperbolic I do believe we could move the game forward by sharing less on a day to day basis while working diligently on subjects and points of review that are more organic to ourselves and less affected by the overwhelming momentum of narcissistic oversharing.   Just a thought.


I'm not very smart. But I pretend to be smart on the internet......


I'll admit it.  I find most of the controls in PhotoShop daunting.  There are only a few dozen that I like to use with any regularity at all.  I have to look up the steps every time I go to make a mask or invert a selection or whatever.  I've been working with the program since it came on to the market many years ago and the stuff doesn't stick.  When I do post production on most of my images I find good white points and good black points.  I try to find a pleasing color balance.  I try not to sharpen too much or with too heavy of a hand.  But if you were to ask me to make multiple layers and then use the path from one layer onto an inverted copy of another layer so you could do something tricky and fun with the alpha masks.......I would look at you like a dog trying to make coffee  (and I speak from experience since I've tried to train my dog to make coffee with no good results.....).


But I get away with being a photographer because I can keep pushing buttons till I get something that's close to what I want and you guys don't know how many buttons I've pushed or how many pleading phone calls I've made because you just get to see the small (1500 pixel) samples I've put on the web.  Since you can't quiz me I can look smarter than I really am.  Up till now.

Now I'm much smarter because I'm using Lightroom 3.0 for just about everything.  If the damn photo needs a layer or a layer mask with delta or omega masks I just use the  "remove" tool and use some other file that I didn't mess up on as badly.

This is not a review of Lightroom 3 but it's an admission that I am captivated by the presets that run down the left hand side column,  just to the left of the photograph.  My absolute favorite is "Old Polar".  I select that preset and everything gets much closer to my original vision with very little intervention from me.  One exterior construction scenes I prefer "direct positive"  because it makes my images saturated and meaty.

I still have to do a little work.  I take out a bunch of the orange color that "Old Polar" adds and sometimes I have to tame some skin tones when I notice that a preset crunches the clarity slider all the way over to 85%....  But largely I've come to see Lightroom 3 as pre-programmed fun.  A clever starting point.

Nice to take a break from the relentless oppression of having to be acceptably knowledgeable about PhotoShop.  It saves the brain cells I desperately need to use in learning Final Cut Pro.

The image above is of Jana from back in June.  I was working on a folder of images to give to Jana and I decided that I really liked this one a lot.  It was done in available light with a Canon 5d2 and the 85mm 1.8.  Can't tell you much more than that since I shot it in RAW and let Lightroom dance all over it.

It's been a rough week because I've been immersed in an annual report shoot that has been mostly about taking environmental portraits on construction and roadway sites.  The temperature and humidity have been very high and it makes the whole process very physical when we start dragging around 20 pound sandbags and 35 pound light cases.  Most construction sites are far from ADA compatible and our luggage cart is useless in a vast field of mud and rocks.  But the images have been great.  The client is great and the subjects have risen to the occasion.

Here's one bright spot:  I bought a used 20mm Canon lens a few months ago and last week I noticed that it had developed a very distinct rattle.  It wasn't just the aperture blades, something was moving around on the interior of the lens barrel.  I thought about repairing it myself but then I remembered how costly my last DIY repair became, over time, and so I took it into Precision Camera for repair.  They looked at it, logged it in and told me they would take care of it.  But I was shocked to get a phone call this Thurs. (one week later, exactly) telling me that the lenses needed a part, it had been ordered, it came in, the lens had been repaired, tested and was ready.  One week.  With a part order.  Amazing.  It's good to know a great camera repair shop.

Almost as much fun as playing with "Old Polar" in LR3.

One more week to go on the AR.  Hope everyone has a nice week.