A Camera in the Hand...

I tried a 90D in shop on Saturday.

Not a contender I am afraid. The af through the view finder (a simple near-far test) used with a last gen. 70-400 F4L was slower than I am used to. The tracking af is likely better at a fixed distance, using predictive phase-detect, but I was surprised at how laggy it felt after my Oly gear. The live view focus was good, but certainly no better than anything I have now and not it’s natural state.

To check my feelings on the matter I tried a 5D4, which was noticeably better in view finder af and an XT4 with 100-400 which is still in the mix, but the 90D is out. Shame, as it ticked all of the boxes.

It is also good sometimes to remind yourself where you have come from and how you got there. EM5 mk1, 17mm F1.8

It is also good sometimes to remind yourself where you have come from and how you got there. EM5 mk1, 17mm F1.8

Moving Forward, Retro Style

As a confirmed mirrorless user, serious contemplation regarding my next purchase, an SLR may seem odd.

The reality is, I love the mirrorless work style, but I am not blind to the benefits of SLR’s. Even when happily using mirrorless cameras, my mind often switches to the things I miss about SLR cameras.

Battery life.

In their natural form, SLR’s are up to three times more battery efficient. At the moment, a major sports event where I work, is a three battery affair. With an SLR, it would only be one.

Applying a photographic brain.

This one is really odd. An SLR gives you less feed back, making you think more “photographically”. Exposure and jpeg effect previews are all second hand with an SLR. In effect you have to predict rather than see and react. This to me is a major selling point for an SLR. I know my own photographic thinking has been blunted by the “what you see is what you get” feed back loop of a mirrorless.

The feel.

I miss the feel. The bigger form factor, the glass only view finder and specifically the Canon curves are all things I miss for some applications. It occurred to me recently, while teaching a student how to use their SLR, how much I liked and missed the Canon SLR interface.

The best of both worlds.

The reality is, the latest generation of Canon SLR’s are (will) be effectively true hybrids. Ironically this comes at a time when mirrorless cameras have reached SLR like performance, so I guess the hybrid is coming from both directions. Like a very economical petrol powered car or a noiseless magnetic tape, the revolution has maybe come in the form of a too little-too late package, but for a short time, there is a window where the best of both worlds intercede.

The 90D specifically has floated to the top of my soon to be filled wish list as the best all-round camera solution for my current kit.

It offers several needed things;

The better battery life (1500-2000 shots) in SLR mode.

Sports capable af system in two forms, both roughly equalling the EM1 mk2. Canon eye focus tracking in live view mode, which seems to be as good as any current mirrorless (basically the same as the latest RF series) and full phase detect af in SLR mode. The 90D has been positioned as a replacement for the 80D and 7D in a shrinking SLR market.

Lenses that are top tier, especially in affordable telephoto options (a short fall in the Nikon and Sony ranges). The 70-200 f4 or 200 f2.8 are proven winners for under $1000au, the 100-400 is best in class (possibly tied optically with the Fuji, but better made), and the 70-300L is a gem. Not to be forgotten are the older, but still better than Nikon’s offerings for most of their lives, affordable short teles, the 85 f1.8, 100 f2 and 135 f2 primes. the reality is, these excellent and proven lenses are sometimes being bettered by new mirrorless designs, but not by much and at a premium price.

Forward compatibility for an eventual migration to RF.

200,000+ shutter fires or so (Canon’s have generally exceeded their quoted count, some by a great deal. My old 50D for example, went to a sports shooter who retired it at half a million+ frames). This is not as many as the quoted 400k of the EM1 mk3, but the camera is considerably cheaper and has other advantages.

Great price. The 90D undercuts the G9, EM1 mk2, is nearly half the price of an EM1 mk3, is cheaper than anything full frame except the budget Canon mirrorless and is more advanced than many. It also offers weather sealing, which for a Canon is a new low price point. The reality is, the last generation of Canon SLR’s (?) are great value. Much better than most other options.

IQ. Added to the beautiful Canon colour, that I have always used as a standard, is the real benefit of more pixels, and with added cost compared to it’s earlier models. Canon is just measurably a little behind some others in dynamic range and high ISO performance, but they are ahead of M43, where I am now and that is still excellent. The higher pixel count means that the exhibited noise is relatively smaller or aggressive cropping is possible. From a sports perspective, this gives me several advantages. The first is smaller, shorter and faster lenses can do more and secondly, shooting wider, then cropping after is more realistic.

To put it another way, the camera effectively has a 100% cropping factor benefit over an R6, between it’s native format (1.6x) and pixel count advantage (1.5x) and a 50% advantage over my current 20mp maximum and/or can perform at a full ISO setting higher (at least) for the same quality.

Would Full Frame be better in low light? Of course, but again, just as when compared to M43, that would be at substantially higher cost and weight in camera, lens and depth of field.

For example R6 would easily beat it in low light, but the base camera and lens (100-500) come in at about $8500.

The 90D with both a 200 f2.8 and 100-400 would end up at $5500 (just with the 70-300L at $3500), with better battery life, better handling, more depth of field for more keepers (+1 stop), more reach (400=640) or a faster lens (200 f2.8 = +2 stops at 300 equiv.), 50% more pixels and the hybrid advantage.

Other minor considerations are;

My M43 gear is still fully relevant. The Canon does come with the downsides of a big, sometimes noisy and always very obvious SLR. The M43 gear would be used for most other work, especially with children in close, as backup for sports and for indoor work. This may sound counter intuitive, but the reality is, the fast glass and stabilisers from Olympus still have an edge.

Not as easy to achieve with a big, serious looking camera and lens.

Not as easy to achieve with a big, serious looking camera and lens.

I would like a different brand in my kit. No brand does everything well.

Peace of mind for the future. The lenses can go forward to RF and the brand has much less of a shadow hanging over it.

The future (inspired in the past) awaits.

The Keeper of Records

Why do we photograph?

After a couple of years of loss (both parents and two dogs), I understand more than I once did how important documenting the now is, for the future.

An image of my mother when young (she died recently at 80 years). From her perspective, the dog, long gone now, would have been the focus of her memories kept safe in an image, and maybe also the time and place. For me it was the first time I had se…

An image of my mother when young (she died recently at 80 years). From her perspective, the dog, long gone now, would have been the focus of her memories kept safe in an image, and maybe also the time and place. For me it was the first time I had seen the image, produced for the funeral. My grandfather was a chemist and avid photographer from the 1930’s on, which makes my family luckier than most I guess.

After we lost our two older dogs, I did albums of their lives. It helped us cope and move on.

Our two young dogs, it has recently occurred to me, have not had as many images taken of them. Is this because they are young, or maybe in reverence to their predecessors, or possibly I am just not ready.

Maybe the lunacy is just too much to deal with? Lucy (left) has no puppy images, being a rescue, Daisy has some, but not heaps and precious few printed.

Maybe the lunacy is just too much to deal with? Lucy (left) has no puppy images, being a rescue, Daisy has some, but not heaps and precious few printed.

I know that I took more images of the older two towards their later years, so presence of mind to take photos may be in direct proportion to our awareness of mortality. Luckily though, I got lots of images of them young.

Ironically, in an age of torrential photography, with more and more of it focussed on life’s mundanities, we run the risk of losing our memories through a lack of long term thinking. The image at the top of this post is 60+ years old. It was one of many found in an old album, not in the best condition, but stable and (other than creases), in salvageable condition. This “shoe box under the bed” reality is disappearing in the digital world.

Our digital memories and even our cheap prints done on poor quality ink jet paper will probably not outlast our cameras (5 years on average). The Cloud is a help, as long as you (a) remember the image exists (b) can access it (c) allow others to see/access it (d) do not drown what is important in a sea of crap.

Is Facebook going to be our “box under the bed” for the future? If so, who will take the time to preserve.


More Pondering's On My Camera Future

With the imminent change to the Olympus camera brand, then the possible change to Panasonic, depending on their take in the future, Micro Four Thirds is in a bit of a funk with me and I am sure many others.

Taking stock, I have plenty of cameras to support my clutch of excellent portrait/low light lenses, so most of my work will stay unchanged. High speed EM-1’s and Pro glass are not needed or even wanted in many of these circumstances*, but high volumes of work (45gp last month), and the likely need for a longer and maybe faster sports and event lens may be an issue.

With Olympus at a “point of sufficiency”, thoughts turn to areas that could be improved.

Sports performance. The EM1 has been a surprise packet and even has more to offer if I can be bothered with the pesky firmware upgrade, but I would really like too up my game sports wise.

The contenders in descending cost order are Canon (R6 with 100-500), Olympus (EM1 mk3 and the 100-400), which would both add a level of af performance, Panasonic (G9 teamed with their 100-400 or 50-200), which are needed to make their excellent DFD focussing work.

Fuji and the crop frame Canon have fallen away.

An interlude image. This year has been one of upheaval and change. This Dogwood had never flowered before. Just one of the good changes that have come forward this year.

An interlude image. This year has been one of upheaval and change. This Dogwood had never flowered before. Just one of the good changes that have come forward this year.

My Head;

Says get the Canon as a secure pathway to the future. It is dearest, but with sales looming, maybe now is the time. Olympus will still do 90% of my work and personal/travel imaging, but the Canon would be a genuine problem solver in it’s needed role and is future proof brand wise. It will even handle indoor sport with it’s big lens, shooting ISO 6400 cleanly.

My Gut;

Says get the Panasonic. Good value, good results and balance of a “living” system with current kit compatibility. Probably the weakest upgrade overall, it gives me plenty of room to adapt, a second feature set and all without a dramatic outlay (the G9 is a little over half the price of an EM1 mk3 and their 100-400 is also cheaper). I can also justify a wide angle lens (8-25 Oly or 8-18 Pana).

My Heart;

Says stick with Olympus. The EM1 mk3 and long lens would make me effectively done with the system and probably for the duration of any future paid photo work. The comfort and loyalty factor involved with staying the course are also not nothing.

If funds prove to be tight, the 90D and a Canon 200 f2.8 or 70-200 f4L are a good option at $2500, allowing me to still go Canon RF later.


How To Be A Content Micro Four Thirds User Part 2

Following on from the previous post, lets look at another factor

Be realistic about your (and everyone’s) output needs

Be careful what you think you know here. The internet is full of opinions about image quality* but here a few things to ponder;

Almost no one prints to the maximum size their camera can accomodate and if they did, most of their demons would disappear. A well realised print, taken with any camera capable of reaching the medium’s maximum resolution, has worked well enough since the 19th century.

Pixel peeping does not translate into image quality directly. Image quality comes from strong vision, translated with equally strong, but sensitively applied technique, into a realisation of that vision. Technical considerations have always been lurking in the background, but have never stopped us before, so how is it we are so easily convinced that older is no good and newer/bigger is necessary?

EM10 mk2, hand held with a wide open 12-40, cropped from the original (below) and down sized for the web. Good enough for a large wall print, probably exceeding print resolution, which is surely the most it will ever be needed for.

EM10 mk2, hand held with a wide open 12-40, cropped from the original (below) and down sized for the web. Good enough for a large wall print, probably exceeding print resolution, which is surely the most it will ever be needed for.

If your work is only going to make a screen, you will likely down size it, to protect it from pirating, or at best only need to match a 2 or 4k screen (about 8 mega pixels).

I remember a pro once telling me, his editor demanded he shoot with at least 24MP for his magazine (at the time the Nikon and Canon flag ships only boasted about 16). He said he would comply, but continued to shoot with his 20mp 5DII and 10mp 40D, with no after effects. He even admitted to down sizing many files without anyone complaining.

The reality is, only a very few photographers, with specific high-res applications actually need the top end of high resolution cameras, but the majority of these sell to people who feel they need the bragging rights. A more important measure is the quality of the image hitting the sensor. Reduced noise, dynamic range, lens contrast, judicious sharpening, accurate focus combined with depth of field control and enough (shutter) speed to control movement blur are all important to image quality, always. Mega pixels are only important to commercial or fine art printers.

That is why top tier sports and journalism cameras only pack 20mp even now, because for a working pro, getting a good shot “in the can” is vastly more important than maximum possible output..

M43 has advantages that in most cases out weight it’s disadvantages. The small sensor is (all things being equal), going to be noisier, but with a 2x reach and depth of field advantage and generally more efficient stabilisers, you can usually regain the 2 ISO short fall and often with smaller, cheaper gear.

My 75mm f1.8 (150mm f1.8 eq) is one of the best lenses I have ever owned, allowing me to shoot indoor basketball at ISO 4-800. Matched to my EM1 mk2 it handles indoor sports (a tough assignment) very well. Would a D5 Nikon and 70-200 f2.8 be better? Yes it likely would, for three times the price, weight and size. Ironically the resolution would be roughly the same.

If you ask yourself honestly how big and how often you want large file potential, the answer is likely well within your current or even past camera’s potential.

I once shot a full morning of lens comparison images between an Olympus EM5 and Fuji XE-1. Only after I got into the virtual darkroom did I realise the Fuji had been set to small JPEG for some images (vs RAW on the Oly) I used for ebay. I did not notice this at all on a 29” screen until I went to pixel peep and images only jumped up about half again. The files were beautiful, just small. I remember thinking how nice it would be to shoot small JPEG’s for a blog or website, without any consideration needed for big prints.

Mistakenly taken as a 2-3mp image. Every droplet is sharp and clear. The files were still good enough for me to decide about the lenses.

Mistakenly taken as a 2-3mp image. Every droplet is sharp and clear. The files were still good enough for me to decide about the lenses.

*Reviewers like DPreview can show you the micro differences between camera “A” and “B”, but you need to be take into account here that when the best quality print is needed, most images come down to a balance of original file and good post processing, which can easily increase size, sharpness and impact, making the differences between various cameras irrelevant. As an example, look at some good works done using the Nikon D700 or Canon 5D mk1 full frame cameras. Then compare these to the RX100 Sony 1” sensor compact camera. Does the clear resolution difference make any of the work produced on one of Canon or Nikon’s most loved pro cameras less relevant?

Building a Portable Studio Flash Kit

Hopefully this will help any readers looking to add flash into their lives.

As an ardent flash avoider over the years (partly artistic preference, partly just plain chicken), I can recommend adding lighting into your tool kit. Apart from it’s practical benefits, it is a good distraction and creative outlet.

Where to start.

Get two flash units and a cordless controller. You get more power and constant charge from plug-in lights, but no portability. I would recommend Yongnuo 560 IV’s and their controller (or similar such as Godox or Neewer). This should set you back about $200-300 au. The reason these excellent flash units are so cheap, is they are not TTL (smartypants-talk-to-camera) units. They are manual, which is generic (will fit any brand) and can be made in huge quantities. The give away is a single contact pin on the flash’s base. A note here, do not mix brands of multi pin flash units and cameras!!

Why manual? because with a studio set-up, that is what you need (control and consistency), not photo-trickery smarts.

Next add 1 to 3 cheap, light weight Neewer or similar 6.5’ light stands, each with an S-clamp (the big round ones often called “Bowens” style, not the thin little flash/umbrella clamps that are a colossal pain) and white shoot-through umbrella. Rough cost from $80-120au a set, but multi sets are much cheaper (there is currently a set on Amazon with two stands and 6 brollies-but the little clamps-for $80au!).

This set-up can be used either as an efficient shoot through, or less efficient, but slightly softer reflector (as shown). You can use a dedicated controller, a second or third flash as controller or an on-camera flash for fill/catch light and to fi…

This set-up can be used either as an efficient shoot through, or less efficient, but slightly softer reflector (as shown). You can use a dedicated controller, a second or third flash as controller or an on-camera flash for fill/catch light and to fire the unit as a slave, which is fiddly as you need to go to the flash for changes, but if you are organised, no big deal (and you can change aperture or ISO at the camera end in stead).

The S-clamp or Bowens clamp, allows for quick flash removal, a stronger hold, safe battery changes and rotation of the flash body to better “see” the triggering controller. Each unit has stickers marking it’s group, so I can see without going to the…

The S-clamp or Bowens clamp, allows for quick flash removal, a stronger hold, safe battery changes and rotation of the flash body to better “see” the triggering controller. Each unit has stickers marking it’s group, so I can see without going to the flash and the black hair band is for securing the flagging foams. The Bowens clamps also open up a few more modifiers, than an umbrella only clamp.

You can now photograph a small sports team, a car or family portrait.

*

Now to controlling light, which is where the fun starts.

For maximum area coverage, but with little or no control (i.e. light focus), bigger shoot through umbrellas or soft boxes are the way to go. The bigger the surface area relative to your subject, the softer the light. A 72” shoot through umbrella will cost $40-50 au but smaller 43” ones will go 2 for $50.

For more control and added brilliance, silver reflector umbrellas are great. 2 of these at $30 will allow you to focus your light to within 180 degrees and add a little more drama than the shoot-throughs. I recently used a single one, with on-stage down lights to do some drama class portraits, which worked well.

Even more control and softness comes from various soft boxes or umbrella diffusers. The smaller the area, relative to the subject, the harder and more focussed the light. If you get grids for your soft box, you can focus the light even more precisely, without reducing light softness. I have a 24” square gridded, 38” octagonal and 8x36” rectangle, that cost in total $120au. Some of these fit/come with Bowens mounts, which is one reason for getting those (above).

Want fine control? Add a 7” metal diffuser dish (fits the Bowens clamp) with a set of 3 grids, that will give you semi to fine spot light control. $30.

Flagging flash (blocking light to some directions only) is pretty much free, using black soft foam sheets cut to size, held on with rubber bands or hair bands. Two pieces can make a snoot, which is the most focussed light. $2.

Light colour, either for balancing flash to match ambient, or for creating background mood is done using gels, placed over the flash heads. 2 sets with 6 holders, $25.

A good problem solver can be a 43” or bigger 5-in1 diffuser/reflector and clamp for a light stand. $50

I carry the stands and modifiers in a K-Mart duffle ($12) and the flash units, now up to 4, with gels, controller etc in a Neewer tote bag ($29).

My Basics For Using Flash

Turning up to a photo shoot location blind can be daunting, especially if you need to use flash on some level, preferably with a touch of creativity.

In my very short tenure as a working flash photographer (0.000001% of my total photographic life), I have gained enough knowledge to work in a “lets see what we get”, rather than a “Oh sh#t, oh sh#t, oh sh#t” frame of mind.

The basics.

Use Manual.

Manual flash has four active exposure controls and one passive one.

The active controls are; Power (1/1 to 1/128th power), Distance (subject to flash-not camera), Aperture and ISO chosen. The passive control is Shutter Speed, which does have an effect on ambient exposure, but not flash.

The more of these you can control from the get-go the better.

Working for only a month with my rig, I am now comfortable setting up a 1-2 flash outfit and shooting nearly straight away, but I need to control the environment.

I know that if my flash to subject distance is about 3 metres, zoom on the flash at 28mm, my aperture at F2.8* and my ISO set to 400, then 1/32 +.3/.7 to 1/16th power through a shoot through brolly, or 1/16th from a silver reflector brolly are going to be in the ball park. Note that where I stand is basically irrelevant. The flash to subject distance is critical, the photographer to subject distance is not.

Similarly, most ceilings in modern event halls will work with a flagged flash at about 1/8th power at 2.8* and ISO 800 and the flash zoom set to 105mm. This gives me even coverage This is also a good starting point for bouncing flagged flash.

If shooting for fill light outdoors, I will often start at 1/1 power and work for balance. This one is still a work in progress, but a test or two and I am good to go.

These known values (with my flashes), are a starting point I can rely on.

To change these I have a wireless controller on camera that can run three groups separately and is a dream to use (choose the group and increase or reduce the power). If this fails, any one of my 560 IV flash units can step in as a controller.

Shutter speed is chosen based on how much ambient light there is and whether I want to add it in for atmosphere or cut it out to capture movement. At slow camera shutter speeds, you will still capture subject movement sharply as long as you overpower the ambient light , because the flash effectively becomes your shutter. If there is too much ambient light though, you will get subject ghosting as the flash’s fast light and the ambient slow shutter speed light share the exposure giving you one sharp and many blurred versions of your subject. Using a higher shutter speed is not going to capture the movement, but it will cut out ambient light allowing the flash (possibly shooting at up to 1/20,000 of a second), to effectively be your shutter.

As I add more modifiers and make up more complicated flash configurations, I record them in a note book. This allows me to go to an idea with a workable base, then modify as I need.

The reason I do not use TTL is simply because I prefer to control things as shown above. It sits in my head better. TTL uses a totally different set of controls.

The basic strength of TTL is it’s ability to set most of the above for you. It’s weakness is that it bases it’s choices on subject reflectance. Shoot a dark subject without flash and you will usually need to set “-” exposure compensation on your camera. Flash needs the same compensation. It rarely falls outside of a workable-fixable range, but it cannot be relied on to be consistent.

Even though I shoot this way normally (Aperture priority with exposure comp), TTL flash often confuses me and works against my wishes, trying too hard to make flash invisible, then jumping to being too overpowering. It also makes judging battery drain harder. You can control the camera with manual mode, but the flash will still react to it’s environment.

No flash used, just enjoying a great spring.

No flash used, just enjoying a great spring.

*One huge advantage of M43 is f2.8 aperture gives me plenty of flash power (the wider aperture reduces the amount of power needed), but still provides a decent amount of depth of field (equal to f5.6 in full frame). A full frame camera at f5.6 would need either more flash power or a higher ISO setting. Flash on M43 is effectively two stops stronger.

Adventures In Flash Photography (or building a flash kit-quickly)

Flash photography seems to me to be both an ancient art and a new found challenge.

After years of shooting with (for) available light, with rare and occasional contact with studio or flash bound world, I have now come fully around to the necessities of artificial, read; controllable, light.

The journey has been fast and furious to say the least.

The school I work for recently held it’s yr 11-12 ball. We are extremely lucky where I live (a giant island), having no current cases of COVID-19, but as the rest of the world is finding, it takes two weeks to know if you have it and longer to know you are rid of it, so social distancing, cleanliness and testing are still important.

Organising events at the moment, requires careful interpretation of the social distancing rules, so gaining clarity on what would be allowed on the night seemed pretty fluid. Where the ball was held needed to wait until the very night to tell us their expectations.

What would happen in a normal year?

Arrivals (red caret stuff), static portrait, from formal groups to loose friendship groups and some silly stuff, then dancing and mingling shots.

Static “studio style” portrait shots.

Action shots, mingling, dancing etc.

Prep.

I had a YongNuo 560 III and IV and their cordless commander for a while, but had little desire to use them. My out of date understanding of manual flash made it all too hard in my head (as I understood it). I should have read up more.

I added to this kit a second 560 IV, a Godox TTL 685 to deepen and “smarten” up the base kit and a couple of light weight stands, with circular diffuser soft boxes and flash attachment clamps. I felt like I was on the way for small stuff like single subject portraits, but what about larger groups, especially if social distancing makes a small group as wide as a big group?

After a bit of research a couple of shoot-through umbrellas were added. White shoot-throughs are wide coverage area problem solvers. They lack fine control, but that is for later. Right now I need good, soft and even coverage and the consensus is umbrellas are the way to go.

Testing some ideas the night before left me seriously wondering if I was out of my depth. The reality of it all started to sink in. Thirty years of no flash habits having to make way for thirty days of crash learning with little realistic, up to date field experience?

Neil Van Neikirk and Joe McNally amongst so many others are a treasure trove of ideas in a very sharing community, but the reality is, nothing is certain when using flash (their words). There is no sure fire formula for getting it right every time. You just have to get in the ball park, then play around until you have something workable, play some more for something better and take notes.

The day in question.

After the night before, I turned up resigned to the fact that fate and luck would have a large hand in proceedings. My first job was to try out the studio kit and get it right. I played around for a half hour with some passers by as impromptu models and was far from happy with my results. Theoretically, I was fine, but it just would not come together. My two hour safety net shortened too quickly then was bought short when my contact for the school told me the first students were arriving (45 minutes early). This bought me to my second unfinished task, getting the EM1 and Godex sorted out for the arrivals at the front door!

I high tailed it out front, camera, flash and (hair-brained idea) modifier (a cheap Gary Fong knock off) attached. First shot, out of focus and poorly lit. Crap. I ditched the modifier.

Luckily the couple were the senior prefects who took up station behind me to greet arrivals. I told them I needed another shot later, so disaster avoided. Next couple, better. Next better again. With TTL the the trick is to balance the ambient and flash exposure using the exposure comp controls for both devices. I had painstakingly set this up on the camera using the 1-2 level arrangement, but in my haste I just fell back on exposure comp for ambient light on the camera and TTL +/-0 on the flash.

TTL is good and quick and rarely falls outside of a workable range, but you need to remember, the camera is exposing for ambient light, filling with the flash, so the ratio of ambient and fill is crucial, but you also have to compensate for subject. The smartness of the devices can be your undoing. Dark subjects need minus ex comp with both camera and flash!

End result. All arrivals secured, some post to fix the ratios as the sun set and strong down lighting in the entrance dominated and a grudging respect for the EM1 and Godox combo.

Ok, sorted. Secure in the knowledge that the students would be settling in, ordering dinner and listening to speeches, I wandered back to my makeshift studio (stuck in a corner of the room due to restrictions prohibiting anyone leaving the room), determined to somehow set up a workable arrangement.

Remember the old “KISS or keep it simple stupid”? Well I went with a tricky three light set-up straight out of the box!

The primary light (A) was a 560 IV level with me on my left at full height (6.5 foot), sporting an umbrella. Solid choice. Testing had produced even and strong light at 1/32 power! Awesome. Lots of light from little power. Good for batteries and flash heat.

The secondary light (B), another 560 IV, started out to my right, level with my subject’s, cutting across as fill at about -2 stops power. This lasted a few shots and ended up on my level right, lower than “A”, still as fill but more evenly powered.

The third light (C, a 560 III), designed to be a hair or rim light with the added task of warming up the salmon beige wall I had as a backdrop, started to go to sleep quickly The Mk III’s are apparently prone to that (over heating?) , which is why I went with more IV’s as well as them being smarter. Luckily I had two IV’s or things may have gone a bit pear shaped.

6-700 odd portrait images, some dance floor shots (manual flash flagged and bounced off the ceiling at 1/8 strength) and we were done. In a whirlwind three hours, I barely stopped.

Lessons learned.

1) Start with a basic, workable plan and modify it better.

2) Pack more batteries (24 photo grade ones only just made it).

3) Have backups (another 560 IV since added and some modifier options).

4) Appreciate the little EM10 that did the bulk of the work. The thing ran hot, but did not miss one shot in very dim conditions.

5) Go to these things with a feeling of exploration and anticipation, not dread.

6) Use manual (camera and flash). The reality is, I find manual is actually easier to control and more consistent than TTL. More on this later.

Token pretty photo, no flash used.

Token pretty photo, no flash used.


Tooling Around In The Garden With My New Crush (or get a grip)

The EM10 mk2’s I picked up early in the year on run-out are now my core work cameras.

In this role, they felt a little….puny.

I tried two grips.

The Olympus one, which was a little hard to track down, and the generic (comes under many names-mines unmarked) for about 1/3 the price.

The generic came first.

First thing you notice about this one is it comes in three parts (but the Allen key supplied only fits some of the screws). The handle, base plate and side plates are all separate. I originally took off the side plate, but put it back later as it adds some utility and interest factor to the camera.

In hand, it feels solid and secure. I exclusively used this camera over the last two weeks because it felt better than the base camera.

This week the original grip arrived.

Hmmmm…sexy.

The black camera deserved a rest after “attending the ball”, taking 700+ images with my fledgeling flash kit. The thing was hot to touch after, but did not miss a shot.

The grip supported kit clearly offers better Bokeh!

The grip supported kit clearly offers better Bokeh!


Paths For The Future

Looking at what to do next gear wise, I have narrowed down the contenders to five. Two M43 options and , Fuji and two Canon options.

What I am after is not a great deal;

More depth, especially with sport grade af,

More reach, or at least a better long lens option,

Possibly a wide option.

More pixels? not really unless there is a free bonus nature to them (see below)

Cropped from a 20mp image file, taken with a mid range zoom.

Cropped from a 20mp image file, taken with a mid range zoom.


Each option has it’s benefits and cautions, so lets look at the maths.

Olympus ($5000au).

The EM1 mk3 and 100-400 Olympus combination offers more reach (800mm equiv), more depth (400k shutter and better af) with some more features. It is also fully compatible with my existing kit.

Pro’s; Everything fits, everything is familiar, longevity with Olympus is secured for a while longer.

Con’s; Throwing more money into a possibly dead system path.

Panasonic ($5000au).

This offers me a same-but-different camera in the G9 with some areas of clear superiority over my EM1 mk2 and some areas where it is a little weaker. I feel the G9 is a slightly better camera than the EM1 mk2, but slightly weaker than the EM1 mk3. One of the benefits, their DFD focussing, which nails some situations, does have a couple of caveats. The first is a reliance on Panasonic lenses, the second is a “wobble” effect through the view finder when focusing.

The lenses are the 100-400 Leica which has suffered some mixed reviews, but is on the whole near enough to the Olympus lens and half a stop faster through most of the range. The second lens that just squeezes into the budget is the Leica 8-18.

Pro’s; More M43, but a different feature set, more reach, more width, future proofing.

Con’s; exactly my needs addressed, nothing more, only about a stop of overall benefit in low light.

Canon RF ($7-9000au).

Canon is suddenly kicking some serious goals and clearly starting the shift to mirrorless , not just as a perceived forced transition, but as a real embracing the benefits first route.

The R6 offers no more pixels than my current cameras, but it does offer up to three stops more realistically useable, ISO range. The af looks top notch and the dynamic range is wider than my M43 cameras.

Match this with their 100-500 lens, which looks to be magnificent and you have a combo that is not necessarily capable of better maximum quality, but really has the potential of being a “more often” quality image maker.

The lens logic is interesting. Loosing 300mm equivalent reach, the lens acts like (in M43 terms) an f2-4.5 lens in equivalent depth of field thanks to the sensor size and power.

Add to this either the 24-105 L or even the 24-240 zoom (plenty good enough for small print and facebook) and there is a full kit, but at $10,000 or so.

Pro’s; best in class overall performance from a 20mp sensor, future proofing and depth

Con’s; cost, two systems and possible over kill.

Canon EOS ($4500 +if a standard lens is added)

A 90D and 100-400 L II are a solid, high performance sports rig. Addressing the specifics of above, this combo adds the SLR advantages of much better battery endurance (2000 odd shots), good reach (640mm) and depth (200k shutter fires), with cropping (30+mp) in a fit to purpose camera and lens kit. The lens also transitions into RF well, only being beaten by the 100-500, which is $1000 dearer.

The 90D gets mixed reviews with OVF af performance (DPreview canned it openly), but great reviews for live view performance. I know however, that the camera offers high af customisation, which is almost never taken into account in reviews.

Pro’s; Good value, good future pathway, more pixels (if needed), SLR benefits.

Con’s; An SLR (!), iffy top tier sports af, no more M43 depth.

Fuji ($5000).

The XT4 is like the G9, same, but different. The long lens is strong, the semi free standard is a cut above and if a 14mm were added, would make a full kit.

The plasticky tele is annoying, but optically strong, the camera offers a genuine 1-2 stop ISO benefit, more pixels and the jpeg work flow is tempting. The ability to have my M43 kit intact, complimented by a full Fuji kit is really tempting. All other options either add little in the way of image options, or they are not complete in their own right.

For some reason, running this with M43 feels right, as I have done this before in the early days of mirrorless.

Pro’s; A sensor that acts like a Full frame, but with a cropping benefits, glassy images, jpeg work flow, great glass.

Con’s; Not really any except the plastic lens barrel and the need for a grip to balance the camera/lens.

Ready for the Black Friday through Christmas sales, where I end up may surprise even me.

Sufficiency and the Future

Waiting for a class to arrive for a class portrait, I went exploring in the grounds at the school I work for.

Easily enough taken with an EM10 mk2 and 12-40 lens.

Easily enough taken with an EM10 mk2 and 12-40 lens.

The image above is a crop from below.

Outside of “fear” distance with a 40mm lens.

Outside of “fear” distance with a 40mm lens.

This got me considering, once again, what our realistic level of sufficiency is and why we constantly question it, especially considering my immediate future.

I have pushed the M43 system pretty hard over the last few months. Indoor sports with medium grade lighting, Drama (both performance and portraits), long range field sports, on the fly portraiture, events and images suitable for enlargements, and it has always come up trumps.

I intend to increase the depth of my kit, or rather as quantity is not the issue*, increase it’s depth in pro specs.

The options for about $5000 au. are;

A Panasonic G9, that would compliment my EM1 Mk2 with a same-but-different dynamic. The G9 is in many ways a better camera than the EM1 mkII, or at least offers a solid “plan B” for most situations. This would likely be matched with the 50-200 or 100-400 Leica lenses (the G9 and this lens come in at $500au less than the EM1 mk2 and Oly lens and $1300 cheaper than the MK3 and lens and is 1/2 a stop faster) with possibly the 8-18 as a true wide option. My migration path would still be within M43, but with two feature sets and cross-over into a “living” system.

A Fuji XT4, 100-400 and superior kit 18-55. Again, a similar camera to the EM1, but with better low light performance, a stellar long lens and very neat “kit” lens. If a 14mm was added, this would be a working kit in it’s own right. Obviously there would be no cross compatibility, but I could shift either way in the future.

Another EM1 (mk2 or 3) and the new 100-400 Olympus. This is a commitment to a brand with a possibly limited life-span, but 400k shutter actuations on the EM1 mk3 is double most other options and the Oly 100-400 is best in class. This would likely see me out with Olympus, offering full kit compatibility, or at least get me through until I can justify a full shift to a more affordable FF brand (everything at the moment seems to be getting dearer).

Cheap option, get my 40-150 back, with an EM1 2-3, saving $1-2k, but lacking a long option.

A seemingly odd shift to a Canon 90D SLR and long lens (200 f2.8, 70-200 F4 non IS cheap options or 100-400 IS II), giving me a best value option for sports, better battery life and a logical upgrade path to Canon FF mirrorless when the prices become reasonable (or maybe even not). This is where I lament selling my 400 f5.6, 200, 70-200 and 135 L’s, but oh well. A 90D and 70-200 F4L or 200 f2.8 comes in at $2500, surely making it the best value with a 300mm F2.8/4 lens equivalent.

Sony. Too dear, messy and video centric.

Nikon. Great cameras but expensive or iffy low grade tele lenses, when compared to Canon’s mass of excellent budget “L” options. A D500 would be nice, but what affordable lens options would keep it’s Af tracking edge intact?

*I have lots of depth with 2 EM10 mkII’s doing low stress daily work stuff, 3 EM5 mk1’s in my flash kit, an EM1 mkII reserved as my sports camera, The Pen F, one EM5 and Pen mini for personal use. The shortage is in tracking af capable cameras.

Sport And Where To Go Next

Being a school photographer has to be just about the best place to exercise all of your (my) photographic muscles. The subjects are diverse, interesting the situations even more diverse.

Indoor production? No problem. In situ portrait, or classroom interactions , again no issue. My kit sports a set of useful primes and a great standard zoom, so no technical issues.

My favourite subject, mainly because it is a license to have fun with little pressure, is sport.

Ironically, that is where I am weakest gear wise. A logical at the time selling off of my 40-150 f2.8 and later my 12-100 f4 has reduced me to shooting sports outdoors with the 75-300 and 40-150 “kit” level lenses.

Now I love these lenses. Tied for best bang for the buck in the system, especially for cost/size/weight, they have both proven themselves over and over as more than capable for casual shooting, but when you have to get the shot, they look a little thin on paper (and I dread the day I am standing next to “that” photographer with a huge white lens monster!).

Last Wednesday, I had my first serious outing with field and indoor sports.

Indoor Netball was fine, although I swear it is the toughest sport to shoot with its fast pace, stop-start dynamic and usually poor indoor light. I spent too long there (had 1 1/2 hours to cover four sports) as I did not feel I had hit my rhythm, but after 25 minutes, I surprised myself and came out with 20 odd “local newspaper” grade shots using the 75mm f1.8 and 12-40 f2.8. This combo is hard to better. Early fears that the older 75mm may not have the newest focussing “legs” I had the pleasure to experience with the 40-150 pro, have been pretty much put to bed and the 12-40 is sure footed and useful, if a little short sometimes.

Hurrying down the hill to the multi field Football and Soccer grounds I was gifted with strong winter sunlight…… for about five minutes.

A crop 50% from the 75-300 at F8 and 190mm, ISO 800 with the EM1 mk2 (original firmware). This was a sequence of about 5 images ending in a solid collision.

A crop 50% from the 75-300 at F8 and 190mm, ISO 800 with the EM1 mk2 (original firmware). This was a sequence of about 5 images ending in a solid collision.

I cannot share many images as I do not wish to show the faces of the kids from the school I work for (in the yellow), but just lets say, I was (again) surprised by the accuracy, speed and sharpness of the EM1 and 75-300 combo in reasonable light. The grounds are down low, so they loose the sun early, but while it lasted, it was good.

In a nutshell, if I used my skills and anticipated the action, followed the subject and fired at the right time, the camera made sure I got the shot 75 percent of the time or better and usually managed 100% in sequences.

Another tight drop. This was a sequence of 10 images, all sharp (same stats as above), but the best three, where contact was made images had the student’s faces in. Shame about the messy background, but I found if a I stood in one spot, I could cove…

Another tight drop. This was a sequence of 10 images, all sharp (same stats as above), but the best three, where contact was made images had the student’s faces in. Shame about the messy background, but I found if a I stood in one spot, I could cover three grounds at once, taking what I could get. The benefit of a 400-600mm lens equivalent.

Then came the acid test.

Massive black storm clouds descended over the grounds, stealing what little light there was (about three stops). The maths got nasty. ISO 1600 (my realistic quality limit), lens wide open (about f5.6 in the 200mm zoom position, equal to 400mm on a full frame-it is a hair sharper at f8) and 1/250 to 1/500 maximum shutter speed. Many of the images came out a little dark with the camera set to manual, as the light was occasionally dropping even more. I was not too hopeful.

All I can say is, if that is your kit and situation, don’t worry too much. A little noise reduction to taste, some contrast boosting, lightening where needed, maybe a little localised clarity and you will be fine. Again, local newspaper, back page sports images, even with a little (or a lot of) cropping.

Would I like to upgrade lens?

Yes I would, if nothing else than for weather sealing (which eventually cut my day short).

The (budget limited) options are:

Buy back my 40-150 from the friend I sold it to for about $1000au. Benefit, +2 stops at 300mm FF eq., sharper (better micro contrast), better AF and weather sealing.

Buy the new 100-400 Oly ($2300). Benefit, sharper, better AF, longer range, but no aperture speed/ISO benefit.

The Panasonic 100-400 ($2000au). Benefit, as above, possible not as much in AF, but it is slightly faster at shorter focal lengths.

The Panasonic 50-200 ($2000au). Benefit, longer than the Oly 40-150, but a little slower at the long end. A stop faster and all-round better than the 75-300 at 200mm (400mm equiv) except any real AF performance boost is uncertain with Pana lenses on Oly bodies.

Buy a Canon 80D on clearance with the excellent 200 f2.8L ($2000-2500au). Benefit, +1 ISO and +2 aperture stop boost at 300mm FF equiv. and a sports dedicated 100K + shutter fires. This would also provide a good option for an “R” series switch later or another cheap SLR. Splitting the kits does not bother me as their roles would be quite specific. Olympus for most stuff including some sport, Canon just for sports. The non zoom is a little limiting, but I know from experience that the 300mm f2.8 “hole”* is the problem, not covering a wider range. It also works well with a good teleconverter.

Buy a 6d Mk2 and 75-300 or the 200mm above ($3000au). Benefit, +3 ISO stops, with the same 300mm lens dynamic at 5.6 or +5 (!) stops with f2.8 200mm and FF camera, but lots of cropping. The AF system in the 6D is the same as the 80D, except more centralised as the AF coverage is crop frame.

Nikon would be in the race except they do not offer a range of good value semi-premium tele lenses.

Option B is to just keep going as is and see what the Christmas sales cough up.

*This hole is the mid-wing field sport, or far end of the court, indoor range that is so often the ideal distance to shoot these sports at and my weak area.

The (re)Invention of Flashman

Flash.

For some a great problem solver, equaliser and creative gateway, for some, too much trouble to do well and far to easy to do badly.

Once a regular user of flash (early film TTL), I stepped away from it naturally when I started to shoot more landscapes and more when I switched to digital.

I need it now. I probably don’t need it really need for my normal shooting “style”, but I want it to be mastered so I can control my environment better. The reality is, photography is light dependent (quantity and quality), and when the subject’s situation is fixed, you have to be flexible.

I am turning to two masters for info and inspiration; Neil Van Neikerk through his books and at neilvn.com and Joe McNally, mostly through one book, “The Hotshoe Diaries”. Both of these guys generously offer all the instruction you need, both technically and creatively.

This is enough. More opinions and things start to get confusing, any less and I become a mirror of just one mentor. I would like to think I am just “brushing up”, but the reality is I have ignored flash for over a decade, so realistically I am starting from scratch technically and I am well rusty aesthetically.

The big learning curve for me is the way flash now works compared to my long memory of past techniques. I have been falling back on old thinking, which turns out to be well out of date.

TTL with digital pre-flash and manual, just using output fractions rather than the old “GN divided by distance = aperture” stuff is sooo much easier.

Gear.

I have a couple of excellent, manual only Yongnuo YN560 III and IV units and the TX off camera controller for a few years, but have not up till now been interested in using them and I have now added a Godox TTL 685. Straight out of the box, the Godox gave me predictable results. The very first image I took, of the news paper, was given a tiny -1.7 TTL blip, producing about what I had hoped. Daisy’s second image shows reduced strength in the black stripes and slightly softer light at about -.7 (if only she would hold still). Magic!

The YN’s will be used on light weight light stands with Neewer 16” circular soft boxes (2x set on Amazon for au $45), giving me a neat little portable studio, the Godox will be used for TTL bounce flash with the $2 “black foamie thing”*, possibly with a large Neewer reflector on a stand in lieu of a handy wall.

This latter is for speed as manual fill on the fly is indeed possible, but needs some time put in to perfect.

I also have a pair of tiny Oly flash units I can always carry for direct outdoor, gentle fill or possibly to trigger the Godox in slave mode.

The “Black Foamie Thing” allows you to flag or block stray flash light, giving you maximum control of light direction. The images above (thank you my long suffering wife), were taken indoors, using a wall as a giant soft box, with the light looking directional and natural (a little post was added). The second image shows the base exposure at -2 ev without flash. Too easy. I forgot to take the image that makes this necessary, the brightened non-flash image with a blown out background.

I will of course fall back on a reflector and natural light as often as possible, but I fully intent to get this mastered. The motto going forward is “keep it simple stupid”, using less first, more if needed only.

*Neil Van Neikerks “Black Foamie Thing”, https://neilvn.com/tangents/about/black-foamie-thing/ is a revelation that, in his own words “lets you throw out the over priced Tupperware” commonly used for flash modification.

I will also experiment with a white foamie thing to reflect light in when the ceilings are too high.



Haiku #89 Kimono Life

Journey's End

We (my wife and I) have been to Japan seven times over the last five years or so.

There was little planning involved. It starting as a need to use a ticket credit for me from a cancelled trip after the Tsunami, with my semi reluctant wife for company, then an urgent need to return, driven as much by her as me, then a couple of opportunistic impulse trips, then a a few later ones that had a feeling of consolidating re-visits and deeper exploration.

We grow as we go. Repetition allows refinement, new vistas broaden our own.

My photographic journey has been one of evolution within a consistent technical envelope. Before each trip, I stress about lens and camera combinations, leave home never happy I have the perfect combo, but I am never disappointed when I get there. The lesson is; what ever, where ever, will work on some level.

The only consistent factor has been Olympus cameras and lenses. The travel kit is always kept comfortable (I have little tolerance for heavy bags, cumbersome rigs or in the field confusion).

The last set-up was sparse in the extreme (for me). An EM1 mk2, 12-40 and 40-150 (kit version).

My first trip was a pair of EM5 mk1’s (and a spare in my case), a 17, 45, 75-300. Regardless of the set-up, the results are always similar. The reason is of course, that regardless of my gear, I shoot the same subjects in the same or a similar way, because that is my “style” and what I chose is never far from that thinking. It seems I adapt to my gear rather than the other way around.

My processing on the other hand has evolved a great deal.

Early on, I seemed to be looking for almost an “anti-Canon” look, in response to what I perceived to be an anti-Canon or Canon curing colour foundation from the OMD sensor.

An image from the first trip, early eyes and early processing. The colour is dulled, the look heavy and dark and the angle, a very self conscious shot from behind the subject. The trip took place during a moody, wet spring, which did also affect my …

An image from the first trip, early eyes and early processing. The colour is dulled, the look heavy and dark and the angle, a very self conscious shot from behind the subject. The trip took place during a moody, wet spring, which did also affect my perceptions, so on the whole, this was me.

As I evolved with the cameras, I found that I could extract nearly any look or “feel” from the sensor, much more than I could from the Canon, Sony or Fuji sensors I had been co-using before committing to Olympus only.

A few trips later, more self confident and of the sensor in the camera, I pushed harder, enjoying the warmth and depth of the files.

A few trips later, more self confident and of the sensor in the camera, I pushed harder, enjoying the warmth and depth of the files.

COVID-19 has forced a pause on the world. This pause has allowed me to take stock and consolidate my ideas and images from the seven trips, with plans to top them off with a book ( called “Japan 7” or “Japan #of days” maybe).

We will return as soon as we can, but that will likely be next year at the earliest and I will be a ways down my journey by then, so the evolution will continue.

Who knows.

Full Frame Jitters (As Usual).

This one is familiar to many smaller format users and I know before I start what the outcome will be, but for your and my benefit, here is the thought process. This post should really be titled “Being a Content M43 User part 2”, but I am not going to put that much thought into it.

I am contracted to a school.

Their standards are high and their catalogue of previous work is deep.

I know from my previous work that I can match what I have seen, but the nagging little voice in the back of my brain pan keeps saying “do you think you will need full frame?”.

Image Size.

I already have a large image sample, taken with an old OMD and a slightly better than kit lens (75-300), using “snap shot” technique (at best), that has been enlarged to a 3x4 foot wide sign, after some cropping. That is the size reality addressed. I know that 16-20mp is enough to max out most printing formats, especially if logical viewing distances are factored in. Full frame would increase the maximum possible enlarge-ability of the file, but not by much and should not be necessary. The reality is, photographers have been doing billboards with less for years.

Light gathering and image noise.

This one is tricky. From a purely technical perspective, there is little need for a larger format all things being equal.

Firstly there is the critical mass of the math. If an image needs to be taken, the light available will be (in non artistic or astronomical fields), good enough to see by, so good enough to photograph within a reality envelope I can reach.

Then there is the image making format math. The depth of field to reach to light gathering balance M43 gives me is usually a good balancing point for full frame.

Let me explain.

First the foundation to the argument;

F1.8 in M43 has about the same depth of field as F2.8 in full frame at the same effective magnification.

If we accept that 2.8 is the pro’s “working” and often widest available aperture, using a full frame standard or workhorse tele zoom, as it offers good low light performance and enough realistic depth of field to be in the comfort zone of soft backgrounds and sharp subjects, then M43 matches it with cheap, light primes at F1.8 at two ISO settings lower. Sure, the full frame user can pop on a 135 f1.8, but at what cost and bulk and then you still have the issue of very shallow depth of field that is often not practical (it is more practical at longer distances, but the magnification falls away, forcing cropping…). I have owned a Canon 135 f2 and very rarely used it at f2, but my 75mm f1.8 (150mm f2.8 equiv.) is used at f1.8 regularly.

Shot wide open at f1.8 on my 75mm. Any longer (an actual 150mm) or with a wider aperture and the focal point would be pretty twitchy. Thinner depth of field is often only useful for exaggerated Bokeh effect, not practical subject coverage.

Shot wide open at f1.8 on my 75mm. Any longer (an actual 150mm) or with a wider aperture and the focal point would be pretty twitchy. Thinner depth of field is often only useful for exaggerated Bokeh effect, not practical subject coverage.

This is the important bit. At the above outlined safe maximum working aperture, an M43 camera can use ISO 800 when a full frame is using ISO 3200. Have a look at the noise in the EM1 mk2 RAW file at ISO 800 compared to the Z6 Nikon at ISO 3200 on DPreview. They are nearly identical. The difference is even less if you look at the “print” image sample.

The reality is, for most critical work I will need some lighting control, not high ISO performance. The times this will not be the case are performance images (already done) and winter sport photography, that will never have unrealistic quality or big enlargement needs.

Glass.

Then we come to the lens issue, which is where M43 started for me.

Note; M43 lenses have a 2x cropping factor.

To get the best full frame glass from Nikon, Sony and Canon costs big dollars for big glass and unfortunately, many of the affordable Canon and Nikon offerings are still designed for SLR’s, making the thought of spending big bucks on them even less enticing. Even if I did go that way (within budget), the cropping needed to match the M43 lenses I have (600mm equiv) would take much of the full frame quality edge away. (Canon is releasing an affordable 100-500 zoom soon and some new cameras, but how much and how soon?)

The powerful end of the M43 lens range is very approachable. I switched to M43 when I realised that my favourite Canon glass* was matched or bettered by their tiny equivalents in M43.

The future of Olympus aside, I have plenty of good options at hand now (35-150 equiv at F1.8) and available, covering the core of the professional’s pro zoom range.

This process is irrelevant and tiring, but when your livelihood and reputation are at stake, all options need to be looked at. The reality is, bigger format potentially create better quality, but quality needed and potential quality are often not the same. Cropping to make up for focal length shortages, using smaller apertures and higher ISO settings than desirable for depth of field reasons and choosing not to buy or carry every option due to price or weight are all valid points of consideration, not excuses.

*35L = 20 Pana, 135L = 75mm Oly, 400L f5.6 = 75-300 Oly and 85 f1.8 = 45m Oly.

The Future

Ok. So what do you do when your brand, the one you have committed to decides to sell off it’s camera division to another company with a mixed reputation for brand integrity and development?

  1. Cut and run (as I suspect many will).

  2. Look at your stocks of gear* and if you think it wise, just sit and watch, planning to not plan.

  3. Do as #2, but transition where needed.

  4. Trust that Olympus or more likely Panasonic will support the format long enough to see me through (5 years?). Add a couple of lenses and a top end (?) body or two and just keep going.

Looking at option number 1.

I have too strong a connection with my Oly gear to just up sticks and leave. My fast primes are just too good to easily (and cheaply enough) replace and my zooms, such as they are, are good enough for the tasks they are set (at this point). Also, realistically, in this market, with this news, the gear I have has little value.

Number 2.

This is perhaps the wise route, except that I would like to expand my sports capabilities (see below) and that means either adding more m43 or looking at good options.

Option 3.

Maybe this is the logical one as I have plenty to do most of what I want*. Upgrading my sports/workhorse core would start the transition, then I can just take my time for the rest.

Option 4.

The last is the most tempting. I am aware that m43 is and always will be seen as a non or at best semi professional player, but I also know that, that is for the most part crap-ola in a can.

Nobody I have shown any of my work to has ever criticised it on a technical level and nor should they. These cameras may be behind some of the top, current models in some respects (many measures are irrelevant in the real world and some work in M43’s favour), but we are talking about the handful of current cameras that have an edge. The reality is, more has been done with less in the past**. The last time I had any technical feed-back (three days ago regarding some low light school performance images), it was highly positive, without the commenters being aware I used “little and ancient” EM5 mk1 cameras.

I cannot show the school images, but here is a new discovery that should enlarge to half door size. I love the “quality” of these images.

I cannot show the school images, but here is a new discovery that should enlarge to half door size. I love the “quality” of these images.

It really is a case of “the photographer not the camera” these days, as no one makes a bad camera, format or lens. There is just enough difference between the various models and brands to split them for comparison and many of these measures as I said above, are pretty much irrelevant in the real world***.

To top that off, I can get what I need and want from these cameras, and have no guarantees that I will not shift sideways or even backwards if I switch (techniques that work can be fickle). Anyone else make a razor sharp 150 f1.8 equivalent I can afford?

Sports are the only real area of concern. The 75-300 punches above it’s weight up to 200 (e 400)mm and is occasionally brilliant at longer focal lengths, but it is light dependant. Summer cricket should be ok, winter football is more flexible for shorter focal lengths and as for indoors, the 12-40 and 75 have done the trick. The 40-150 Pro or maybe a Fuji XT# and 100-400 as part of the transition? I would even, if it was the smart move, get an SLR kit again just for sports. No sport at the moment anyway, so no rush.

All of this highlights something I was becoming aware of before I left the shop. It is hard to buy gear at the moment, especially if you are wanting top end results from a start of nothing. It is equally hard to buy badly in a general sense, but the crystal ball of the future is dim enough to make long term planning pointless.

Fuji seems to have a strong base and commitment and they have a unique take on the dynamic of APS-C and Medium format.

Nikon and Canon are the waking giants, finally taking on Sony in mirrorless.

Panasonic is clearly targeting FF Sony as well, as they should being their traditional video opponent, but their M43 may pay the price (logically, M43 makes an ideal second format, as long as sales stay strong enough). I am hoping that Panasonic’s foray into full frame will take the pressure off their M43 offering, something Olympus lacked as an option.

There is every likelihood that I will get a G9 or EM1 mk3 in the future and maybe a better long lens (100-400 Leica). Even if I flog them, my needs will likely be met.

*A gear stocktake revealed about 500,000 to 1 million potential shutter fires left (not counting “free” electronic ones), spread over 9 bodies with some near new flashes and plenty of well looked after lenses. Quality aside, I have tons of quantity.

**My OMD EM5’s produce images at least equal to my old 5D mk2’s and blow away D700 Nikons without many of the negatives, such as size and lens inconsistency. These were the industry backbone for close to 10 years.

***There is a reason we are on a fast track for more measurable quality. It is because we can now more easily measure quality.


Possibilities

I recently picked up a contract as a school photographer. This goes against the grain of the current market, COVID, economic and social trends, so I am fully aware how lucky I am.

To add to this lucky streak, I was asked to do some sport and performance photography during my “trial” week, so I had a chance to fully exercise my skills and gear.

The great thing about this type of work is variety. The tough part is variety. I have let my gear run down a little, selling the 12-100 Pro recently and the 40-150 Pro last year, so it was with a little trepidation, that I pressed my “budget” 75-300 into service as a sports lens, in winter, in the early morning.

What I learned.

The 75-300 on an EM1 mk2 (original firmware) was fully capable of capturing crisp and contrasty images in most light, of running high school age subjects and acquired perfect tracking lock 90% of the time. The other 10% came down to AF confusion, usually locking on to the background when two subjects split the AF area or mistakes on my part.

In poor light/weather, which was unfortunately the case on the first two days, I had to resort to shorter focal lengths with the zoom or my much faster 75mm prime, to get an acceptable combination of ISO (3200 max ) and shutter speed (1/250th min). Performance was still good, but everything was stretched.

It also managed a high hit rate with some recumbent cycles at good speed in reasonably close confines, although the bulk of the better images came from the 12-40, due to distance.

The 75mm f1.8 was also a good performer, although I did not use it wide open on moving subjects as I have always been a little suspicious of it’s AF. This lens often missed focus or hunted on earlier cameras, when the cheaper 75-300 did not. I did however, get some surprising results with indoor basketball with this camera and lens combo (razor sharp at f2.5, crops from portrait orientation below), so maybe the Em1 gets enough out of it.

At this point I have been successful shooting indoor sports with either an EM5 mk1 and 40-150 Pro or EM1 and 75mm, but I would love to try the 40-150 and Em1 combo as it is considered the best on offer from Olympus.

I also need to pull my finger out and do the all too painful firmware updates for the cameras and lenses. I wish they were as easy as the Fuji ones.

Overall I am impressed by the 75 and 75-300’s performance with the EM1 and expect them to jump again noticeably when I update.

*

The news of Olympus selling their camera division, has generated some discussion and at first I felt equal, but controlled amounts of disappointment, betrayal and frustration. The reality is, nothing is for ever, especially in the camera world. Change may be good, or not, but either way I have cameras aplenty*, lenses in equal abundance and Panasonic as an option. There are also millions of Olympus cameras in the world and I am sure stocks of original Olympus gear will be hanging around for a while at least.

The most likely path is to add a G9 and 50-200 or 40-150 for action and as a general work horse, then an 8-18 for rare wide angle use (if needed). The G9 has the same or slightly better AF tracking (lens dependant) and more AF configurations than the Olympus EM1 mk2 and better video, with otherwise the same features. It is wise to match new Pana lenses and cameras to get the most out of their DFD focussing system.

Would I change brands?

Fuji is likely and ready to jump right into. I like their high ISO and jpeg performance and their lenses are stellar. Earlier issues with focus, processing and handling are gone to the point where they are market leaders. I have dabbled with the idea of switching in the past, but have stuck with what worked. Lie the Panasonic plan, I would add just a work-horse sports kit (40-150 or 100-400 zoom and 18-55 or 10-24), then replace other bits as needed.

Nikon and Canon less so as I really do not need full frame and their crop frame options are minimal, but if pushed I could start to transition as needed. DSLR’s for sports are an option, but I really do not want to drop money into a “dead-end” gear trail.

Sony? No, not for me. Again, their best offerings are full frame and I am not a fan of their colour, menus and their lenses are still a bit of a mixed bag.

*Tons of portrait grade cameras and lenses, with the EM1 as my workhorse for sport etc. I could probably use my Olympus stocks for portrait and studio style work for 5 or more hard years work, so only the EM1 would need replacing after all of the sports work it would be doing.

Haiku #88 Winter Eyes Open

A little visual Haiku taken while scouting out a job.

Surprise Packet

While doing a little, much overdue Gallery maintenance, stumbled across this little series of images from Japan.

Two things stand out.

Firstly, they are spider images, not my usual thing of late and secondly, they were taken with the 40-150 kit lens (with only a little cropping).

Again that lens surprises!

And for those arachnophobes out there, yes they are big, about the span of an Australian Huntsman, but thankfully far less active.

To me, this is further proof, that for my needs as an occasional and casual close-up shooter, a true macro lens is not required.