Sometimes things do make sense, but they still refuse to leave you alone.
1
The BMPCC4k is an old camera by todays standards. It has been matched by the GH5s (also old), BGH1, slightly newer, over taken in some ways by various newer M43 cams, even their own and other full frame options, but there is a magic there, a unique look that has been baked into the visual memory of so may makers and viewers.
It has recently been updated to ProRes Raw capable, making it one of a handful of cameras that can do B-Raw and PR-Raw and all for the price of a last gen second hand camera!
AF is crap, stabilising is software based (decent), battery life needs sorting and the thing looks 80’s style plastic-fantastic, but it is a genuine high quality image maker and comes in at about $500au more than just buying a BMVA 5” 12G, which also lacks an XLR input. If you go up to the 7” VA with XLR inputs, you are only $200 odd away from the camera.
I have decided to skip this for the final time, sticking with the BMVA’s and Pana cameras for consistency and because I have done this to death and know there is little real difference.
2
DZO Vespid 40 T2.1 series 1.
This is a dream lens for me. 40mm, which is ideal, beautiful rendering, solid build, decent price and some optical magic. With a pair of PL adapters I would have no fewer than four different focal lengths (Full frame 40mm, APS-C 60mm, MFT 80mm and on the 1.8x crop GH5s a 70mm), a full kit in one lens.
It has been superceeded by the Vespid 2’s, or has it?
The Thypoch Simera-C lenses are well liked super small versions of the Vespid 1’s, but come with some small lens issues (distortion, focus breathing and vignetting), but the Vespid 1’s do it a little easier and in Australia, they seem to be the same price ($1300au).
The Vespid 2’s however render like the Arles line, but miniaturised, so cleaner, sharper more neutral.
A reviewer of yesteryear (literally last year as the V2’s are quite new), might compare the Nisi Athena, IRIX cine and Vespid 1’s, the three “budget” genuine cine lens makers as different ways to skin the same cat (sorry cat lovers).
One is clinical (IRIX), one is smoother but still quite clinical (Athena) and one was decently corrected and sharp but more importantly, character-filled.
The Vespid was a little soft wide open, has some mild fringing and very mild focus breathing, but bags of character and tends to win out often over the other two because it’s competition really just looked a little like high end stills lenses with no character.
The Vespid 1’s have the secret sauce, the cinematic edge and more importantly, a 40mm. The new Vespids are better by most technical measures, but does that make the 1’s obsolete or just different?
This is also now in the too hard basket, the price creeping up with adapters etc and to be honest, I have a ton of under utilised cine glass already.
3
Domke bags are old fashioned, sometimes retro cool, then old again.They are a little out of date at the moment and hard to find in some places, but they don’t care, they just work and are built to survive many fashion shifts, decades even. I bought my first one in the 1980’s and still have it.
My last bag, the 810 is a giver as are my F2, 3x, 4AF, 802, 804, 217 roller etc. Indeed the only Domke bags I regret are the ones I let go.
I am not looking for any more Domke bags, but still keep an eye on the options and Japan often spits out a surprise.