Frans Hofmeester captured and composed images of his daughter Lotte (12 years old) and Son Vince (9 years old) from birth, see the awesome example of Time-Lapse photography below
A video Test done by Joe Marine, Nikon D800 sensor captures more light compared to 5D Mark II and 5D Mark III under low or High ISO settings, but both 5D Mark II and 5D Mark III have less noise at high ISO with bit flat details due to in-camera noise reduction filters.
Nikon D800 performance is excellent up to ISO 1600 the sensor captures more details compared to its competitors
At High ISO Both 5D mark III and II have less noise,
Personally I will prefer 5D mark III or II for video, Which camera do you prefer? – Nikon OR Canon – Share your thoughts with us
Video Details
5D Mark II vs. 5D Mark III vs. D800
Candlelight/Ambient Light Test
ISO 500-25,600
The only light in the room besides the candle was some ambient light from streetlights outside. The f-stop was kept consistent throughout. The Canon footage was converted to ProRes HQ using 5DtoRGB, with the Mark II set to 601 color matrix and the Mark III set to 709.
Nikon 85mm f/1.4 lens
Settings:
Default/Neutral Color Profiles
Canon ALL-I & Nikon KiPro ProRes 4:2:2 HQ
Noise Reduction Off
WB: 3200K
Shutter 50
F-stop stayed the same throughout – F/1.4
Music:
“John Stockton Slow Drag” by Chris Zabriskie (chriszabriskie.com)
Shutter 50 F/1.4
Buy 5D mark III from Amazon || Buy 5D Mark II from Amazon || Buy Nikon D800 from Amazon
Panasonic announced several new products at NAB – The Panasonic AG-HPX600 P2 HD camcorder with 10-bit, 4:2:2 AVC-Intra recording- new series of memory cards called microP2 card,
Panasonic HPX600 P2
Weighing less than 7 pounds and using low power, the HPX600 incorporates a newly-developed 2/3 type MOS sensor to produce beautiful HD and SD images. The HPX600 will achieve the high sensitivity of F12 (at 59.94 Hz) and a signal-to-noise ratio of 59dB. It supports AVC-Intra100/50, DVCPRO HD, DVCPRO50, DVCPRO, and DV as standard. It is 50 Hz and 59.94 Hz switchable for worldwide use.
“With its ultra-light weight and low power consumption, the HPX600 is the first shoulder mount that’s easy on the shoulder while being super-efficient on battery usage,” said Joseph Facchini, Vice President, Panasonic System Communications Company of North America. “With its innovative design and selectable options, the HPX600 is upgradability to new technology such as wireless remote from a smart phone and much more.”
AG-HPX600 will be available in the Fall at a targeted suggested list price of less than $16,000 (body only) and less than $18,000 with AG-CVF10 new color viewfinder.
Panasonic 4K Vari-Cam
Panasonic also teased modular 4k Varicam camera during their NAB press conference, the Camera composed of 3 different units which may be upgradeable with new technology from Panasonic like their AVC-Ultra codec.
Kunihiko Miyagi Director of Pro Video at Panasonic said
“The 4K Varicam with a small recording pack that harnesses AVC-Intra444 to its full potential, a modular form that optimizes field operability, and a sensor that faithfully reproduces a full 4K frame. We expect it to be welcomed in the world of 4K2K mastering.”
New microP2 memory Card
The microP2 card will ensure high-speed transfer, high reliability and the writing assurance of all P2 frame rates, formats and codecs, as well as Panasonic’s newest compression platform, up to the AVC-Intra200 mode of AVC-ULTRA, which will be available within 2013.
“Since introducing this Emmy Award-winning, solid-state recording format nearly a decade ago, Panasonic has continued to make improvements to P2,” said John Baisley, Executive Vice President, Panasonic System Communications Company of North America (PSCNA). “The development of the microP2 card brings additional innovation to the owners of the more than 250,000 P2 products in use worldwide.”
The microP2 card and microP2 card adaptor will not support all P2 products. To use the microP2 card adaptor, a firmware upgrade of current P2 hardware is required and a fee will be charged
Yes this comparison goes in details and…this comparison will clear the doubts and for having….
This is a shootout of the new Nikon D800 and Canon 5D mkIII DSLRs, with a focus on the video quality in particular. More more detailed info, you can read my write-up of the tests at www.crisislab.com.
According to latest rumors the Panasonic GF5 is expected to be announced on 1st week of April, but just before the announcement NDTV.com published Panasonic GF5 images and Specification,
Key Specifications:
12 Megapixels sensor
ISO: 160-6400 (expandable to 12800)
Burst Speed: 4fps
Video: AVCHD/MP4 (FullHD)
Microphone: Stereo
LCD: 3-inch TFT LCD (921K Dot)
Ports: TV/Digital Out and Mini HDMI
After Fuji X10 white orb problem now its time for Canon G1 X “Glow Dots”, During the normal course of testing process imaging resource identified the light leakage problem under certain conditions, the “Glow dots” or “Bright Spots” occur when you combine high sensitivity with high shutter speeds.
Canon response to Light Leak Problem
We sent our images to Canon and they came back with a response, calling the phenomenon “Glow Dots,” though what we see does not resemble dots at all. Canon further says, “Due to the limited circumstances under which the PowerShot G1X ‘Glow Dots’ phenomenon can occur, Canon does not plan to change the camera’s specifications or offer repair service for this issue.”
We will see new Panasonic GF 5 very soon, the new Panasonic GF5 first leaked image appeared on 43rumors today, the look same as Panasonic GF3 and a new rubberized hand-grip added to GF , Now take a look at the rumored specification of GF 5
Panasonic Lumix GF5 Specification
12 Megapixel sensor with Improved noise performance
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