I’m currently flying back to my home in canada after a wonderful trip to Ireland - we had a whirlwind trip around the emerald isle and I have to say I think I’ve left a big part of my heart behind.
I never realized just how beautiful the west coast is with its rugged cliffs, beautiful sandy beaches , sand dunes, lakes, mountains….. gorgeous. I’ll share some photos in another thread.
For this trip I took my Lumix S5iix with me as i wanted to shoot some video, however I left my fast 2.8 zooms and 1.4 primes behind. Instead I took my F4 24-105, F4 16-35 and a 50 1.8. All told it was a winning combo for this trip. I also took my iPhone 15 pro….
On super bright and high contrasty days something struck me - the iPhone was intelligently taking HDR shots to capture as much dynamic range as possible in camera. Yes some of these look somewhat over-processed however at no point did I have to setup a tripod , go into focus bracketing mode, take 5 shots, then go into affinity photo and HDR merge.
On the FF I can accomplish even better results by underexposing for the highlights and using the in-built latitude to pull up shadows in post, OR I can HDR bracket and manually merge in post production.
Without doubt, the mirrorless full-frame camera took higher detailed, nicer tonality photos that hold up better under any type of cropping where the iphone resulting image tends to fall apart when you look at it on a larger screen and crop in. No replacement for displacement and the physics of the sensor size and large glass - however there is also no replacement for convenience and intelligent features too when it comes to keeping a trip fun.
What really struck me is that often the case, I wanted to take a quick grab shot and share it with family on whatsapp or apple messages and I’d be happy to have a reasonably good HDR in-camera processed capability where the actual jpeg merge was intelligently done in camera (similar to an iPhone) for quicker sharing.
This lead me to post the question on another site… why don’t more mainstream camera manufacturers embrace more computational photography?!
What I was answered with is that professionals use MILC and DSLR’s these days and they want full manual control. I’m a professional (shoot weddings and portraits on the side) and 100% I want to have the option for manual control and for certain shots 100% I’d prefer to do a more custom human-tailored HDR in post. However when on holidays and quickly sharing a snap with family back home, I also want the option to let the camera decide to HDR process for me.
Are any of you guys aware of any camera brand that does in-camera processing bracketed images to jpeg ?
Lumix does it for the hand held high resolution, live seen composite (similar to Olympus composite) and a bunch of other computational photography stuff that’s great… but for bog standard jpeg (where the scenes dynamic range exceeds the native sensor) i gotta say, the iphone was kicking butt and doing a better job of not blowing highlights or crushing shadows with Apples intelligent scene stacking HDR technology.
I really think for MILC and DSLR to survive longer term, they need to leverage more computational capabilities into the bodies themselves or even their native phone apps that they provide.
I never realized just how beautiful the west coast is with its rugged cliffs, beautiful sandy beaches , sand dunes, lakes, mountains….. gorgeous. I’ll share some photos in another thread.
For this trip I took my Lumix S5iix with me as i wanted to shoot some video, however I left my fast 2.8 zooms and 1.4 primes behind. Instead I took my F4 24-105, F4 16-35 and a 50 1.8. All told it was a winning combo for this trip. I also took my iPhone 15 pro….
On super bright and high contrasty days something struck me - the iPhone was intelligently taking HDR shots to capture as much dynamic range as possible in camera. Yes some of these look somewhat over-processed however at no point did I have to setup a tripod , go into focus bracketing mode, take 5 shots, then go into affinity photo and HDR merge.
On the FF I can accomplish even better results by underexposing for the highlights and using the in-built latitude to pull up shadows in post, OR I can HDR bracket and manually merge in post production.
Without doubt, the mirrorless full-frame camera took higher detailed, nicer tonality photos that hold up better under any type of cropping where the iphone resulting image tends to fall apart when you look at it on a larger screen and crop in. No replacement for displacement and the physics of the sensor size and large glass - however there is also no replacement for convenience and intelligent features too when it comes to keeping a trip fun.
What really struck me is that often the case, I wanted to take a quick grab shot and share it with family on whatsapp or apple messages and I’d be happy to have a reasonably good HDR in-camera processed capability where the actual jpeg merge was intelligently done in camera (similar to an iPhone) for quicker sharing.
This lead me to post the question on another site… why don’t more mainstream camera manufacturers embrace more computational photography?!
What I was answered with is that professionals use MILC and DSLR’s these days and they want full manual control. I’m a professional (shoot weddings and portraits on the side) and 100% I want to have the option for manual control and for certain shots 100% I’d prefer to do a more custom human-tailored HDR in post. However when on holidays and quickly sharing a snap with family back home, I also want the option to let the camera decide to HDR process for me.
Are any of you guys aware of any camera brand that does in-camera processing bracketed images to jpeg ?
Lumix does it for the hand held high resolution, live seen composite (similar to Olympus composite) and a bunch of other computational photography stuff that’s great… but for bog standard jpeg (where the scenes dynamic range exceeds the native sensor) i gotta say, the iphone was kicking butt and doing a better job of not blowing highlights or crushing shadows with Apples intelligent scene stacking HDR technology.
I really think for MILC and DSLR to survive longer term, they need to leverage more computational capabilities into the bodies themselves or even their native phone apps that they provide.