PocketWizard Tests Prototype Nikon Triggers

PocketWizard, the off-camera flash-triggering company, has finally begun testing prototypes of its Nikon FlexTT5 units.

Normally, Nikon cameras communicate with the strobes via bursts of light, coded flashes which chatter back and forth in the moments before the photo is taken. The problem is that the range is limited, and you need line of site. That’s where PocketWizard comes in. The FlexTT5 sends these signals via long-range, corner-proof radio waves. Previously, these were manual only, and after some teething problems, PocketWizard successfully added an auto mode to it’s radio-powered flash Canon triggers.

The new prototypes, seen in the video above, are still far from production, but Nikon-shooting flash-freaks should be getting excited already. The Nikon CLS system is pretty close to magic already, letting you get great flash-shots with little effort. These new PocketWizards should make the experience even better.

If you just can’t wait, try to track down some RadioPoppers, a rival product which already works with Canon and Nikon and is cheaper: The PocketWizards are around $220 each, and you’ll need two. The RadioPoppers are $180 each for the TTL versions. The problem is that the RadioPoppers are selling so well it’s hard to get ahold of one.

Video: PocketWizard + Nikon – first look [Snap Factory]

First FlexTT5 Nikon Prototype Test [PocketWizard via Photography Bay]

RadioPopper page [RadioPopper]

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Samsung prices TL500, TL350, AQ100 and SL605 shooters

Samsung has just visited a bunch of data sheets upon us, and we’ve drawn out a few as yet unknown numerals regarding pricing and availability of the shooters it showed off at PMA this year. The TL500 above, swiveling AMOLED screen and all, will set buyers back $449 this spring when it’ll be joined by its junior sibling, the TL350, which will cost $349. Both shooters offer RAW support and dual image stabilization, though funnily enough the cheaper 350 model offers 1080p video recording whereas the gaudier TL500 makes do with 640 x 480. If you’re after something a bit more durable, the scratch-proof and rubberized SL605 will set you back only $129, while the all-weather AQ100 gets a $199 sticker, with both expected in that same spring release window. Phew, aren’t you glad you know all that now?

Samsung prices TL500, TL350, AQ100 and SL605 shooters originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Mar 2010 10:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands-On With Lensbaby Fisheye and Soft-Focus Optics

For the last month, I have been testing out Lensbaby’s new fisheye and soft-focus optics, two glass cores which are drop-in replacements for the optic which comes inside the Lensbaby composer. The Lensbaby composer itself is a lens with a ball-and-socket arrangement which allows the front section to be twisted in any direction and place the focus “sweet spot” anywhere in the frame. This is combined with an optic which is heavily blurred away from this spot, leading to some dreamy, tilt-shift-like photos.

Standard Lensbaby Composer on Panasonic GF1 with sharpening and auto-levels applied.

Standard Lensbaby Composer on Panasonic GF1 with sharpening and auto-levels applied.

The new fisheye and soft-focus optics replace this blurry-edged glass for some new effects. The fisheye is a 12mm ƒ4 lens with a massive 360-degree angle of view, enough to catch both your feet and the brim of your hat in the same shot. Trying it out on a Panasonic GF1 (via adapter, although there is a proper M4/3 mount version), it gives a mild distortion, and a very low contrast image. You can twist and turn the Lensbaby, but as the Micro Four Thirds sensor only see the center portion of the image from the lens, it doesn’t make much difference.

It also fooled the camera into underexposure when indoors. As the lens is all manual, for both focusing and aperture (in fact, you have to use a magnetic “pen” to drop in and retrieve separate aperture rings), this isn’t a surprise. Just watch out, is all.

Put the same rig directly onto a full-frame D700 and the world turns inside out. Even in a tiny room, you get nearly all of it in the picture, and the entire image is contained inside a dark circle. Swapping in apertures up to ƒ22 will increase depth-of-field, but there’s little point: With a lens this wide, it’s almost impossible to get anything out of focus.

Fisheye on Nikon D700, sharpened for screen on output. Notice the edge of my finger, actually just under the lens.

Fisheye on Nikon D700, sharpened for screen on output. Notice the edge of my finger, actually just under the lens.

On this camera, twiddling the front end moves the circle around and you can obscure half the image this way. It’s better to leave it in the middle. Image quality isn’t amazing, but as you can see, it’s sharp and contrasty out of camera, and the effect is great fun.

The soft-focus optic is a little less interesting. The lens still focuses sharply, but gives the effect of shooting through a pair of white pantyhose (actually an old movie technique to soften an actress’ skin). Included are aperture disks which have many pinholes punched in them instead of a single central hole. These have a great effect on any highlights in your shot:

Soft-focus, multihole aperture on Panasonic GF1, sharpened on export for screen.

Soft-focus, multihole aperture on Panasonic GF1, sharpened on export for screen.

A few notes on the operation of the system. As I mentioned, it is all manual, although a modern camera will still expose properly in aperture-priority mode. Focusing is easy enough: DSLRs usually have some form of manual-assist in the viewfinder, and the Micro Four Thirds cameras (mine, at least) lets you zoom in on the image to check focus.

Actually swapping out the optics is a knack gained after a few tries. When you insert the removal tool (cleverly the lid of the plastic storage case), the focus ring of the main unit twists with it and therefore drops the part you are trying to unscrew out of reach. You’ll need to grab the fixed silver bands surrounding the focus ring and be bold with a good hard twist. The build quality is very good, and the optics are reassuringly solid and heavy.

The lenses are a photography nerd’s delight, but should you buy them? If you want a fisheye, and already have a Composer, $150 is a steal, and I’d buy one right away. The soft-focus unit is a little harder to recommend, despite being just $90, especially as much of the value is in the neat aperture disks (which can be dropped into the other optics, too). If you want it, you probably know it. I’d stick with the fisheye.

Fisheye [Lensbaby]

Soft Focus [Lensbaby]

Photos Charlie Sorrel:

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Panasonic G2 Adds Touch-To-Shoot Screen, 1080p Video

dmc-g2k

Panasonic continues to tear a hole through the high-end camera market with an update to its original Micro Four Thirds camera, the G1. In fact, there are two new bodies and one new lens.

Both the G2 and G10 share the same body and 12.1 MP sensor with the G1. The G2 is the high-end model, and adds AVCHD-Lite video recording (1080p) and a camera-controlling, flip-out touch-screen. The G10 has 1080p motion JPEG, loses the touch and flip functions of the G2, and gets a lower-resolution electronic viewfinder.

The G2 is the camera you should buy (although prices and launch dates are still unannounced, the spec differences are enough to say the the G10 is a rather crippled version of the G2). The viewfinder alone is probably worth it, at 1,440,000-dots. This is half as many dots again as the LCD panels found on today’s best DSLRS, and it is in a tiny viewfinder. I imagine it is rather good. By comparison the G10 has just 202,000-dots, just like the truly awful add-on electronic finder for the GF1 compact.

Video, too, is crippled in the G10. Sure, it’s 1080p, but it uses the space-hungry Motion JPEG format. If you remember that the processors inside both these cameras is the same, and that the GF1 can do both Motion JPEG and AVCHD, then you’ll see that this is intentionally switched off to separate the models.

At least they both have the same 460,000 dot LCD screen, and the touch and flip of the G2’s LCD is a very nice addition. The touch can be used to focus on subjects, navigate the controls and even release the shutter. The camera will even lock onto an eye and keep it in focus. You can also stick to the old manual controls if you like (the control dial has been moved to the back of the body).

The G2 is a solid, if incremental, upgrade: good news for owners of the original, who can safely stick with what they have for another year (unless they are desperate for video). The G10 marks a new, entry-level model, which we expect to see at a fairly low price.

Both come with the new kit lens, the 14-42mm ƒ3.5-5.6 ASPH with image stabilization. That’s a touch shorter than the original 14-45mm kit lens, replaces the metal mount with plastic and loses the image stabilization on/off switch on the barrel.

The price and launch dates are still unknown. If you don’t already have a GX and are in the market for one — hold off. Of you have one already, enjoy your camera for another year until the G3 is inevitably announced.

Lumix Digital Interchangeable Lens Cameras [Panasonic]

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Blind Camera Takes Photos From Other Side of the World

buttonssasha

This blind camera will snap a picture for you, capturing a moment in time. It does this with no lens, no sensor and no viewfinder. In fact, the black box consists of little more than a red button and a screen.

Point it where you like, press the “shutter” and the time of your exposure is captured. The box, named Buttons, gets to work trawling the web for a photo taken at the exact moment you pressed your button and when it finds one (minutes or hours later, depending on when somebody else uploads their snap) it will display it on the box’s screen.

The guts of Buttons is a SonyEricsson K750i running custom software. This is what records the time and communicates with a server called Blinks. This server runs a PHP script that searches Flickr for pictures matching your data. The big red button is from an old Agfamatic 901 camera, one of those little flat 110 pocket-cams.

Buttons is a project by artist Sascha Pohflepp, not an actual product. I’d love to see this hacked into an actual trick camera, though: You could hand it to a friend who thought they were snapping pictures all day long, only when they got home, they’d have a bunch of strangers’ pictures from around the world. It reminds me of the days when prints would get mixed up at the lab: I’m still scarred by those photos I got of my geography teacher’s erotic cosplay.

Button, A Blind Camera [Blinks and Buttons via Make]


Canon’s New All-Manual L-Glass Lens Holds Coffee

so_greatThis lens-shaped coffee-cup might look like some dodgy back-street knock-off waiting to be sold to some short-sighted sap for big money, but it is in fact official Canon merchandise. The cups were being handed out to reporters in the press pen at the Vancouver Olympics.

The cup/thermos is modeled on Canon’s 70-200mm L-Series lens, which normally goes for around $700. This picture was snapped by one of the lucky owners – Microsoft’s Josh Weisberg – and the picture sent proudly to the Photo District News Blog.

It’s the perfect gift for a chilly sports snapper, and a smart move for Canon: how else is the company going to re-fill the stadium sidelines with its signature light-gray lenses now sports photographers have all switched to the Nikon D3? Kidding!

Swag Alert!: Canon White Lens Coffee Mug [PDN Pulse]


5D MkII Update Adds 24p Video, Sound Levels

Canon’s hot 5D MkII gets yet another firmware update today, only instead of fixing engineering problems (black spots), it is fixing some poor design decisions.

Canon’s video-shooting, full-frame DSLR has proved popular with movie makers thanks to its great HD video and its huge range of cheap (by movie camera standards) lenses. Canon, though, inexplicably left out some essential functions, which have been added in this update.

First are frame-rates. The camera now shoots at 25fps and the film-like 24fps, and the 30fps option has been tweaked to use the NTSC standard 29.97fps. Exposure, too, has been fixed, and now you can display a histogram on screen in manual, shutter-priority and aperture-priority modes (you can also use these exposure modes when shooting movies).

Finally, sound has been upgraded, with the sampling frequency increased from 44.1KHz to 48KHz, and an on-screen level-meter added for manually setting sound levels.

We think its great that such big changes can be added with free firmware updates. What we don’t like is the rather arbitrary manner in which Canon switches off functions. The 5D MkII is one of Canon’s highest-end cameras, and it took until now to add in 24p video? We understand differentiating compacts through software, but not cameras at this level. After all, the 5D isn’t competing with any other Canon camera. And one more thing, Canon. When will you put time-lapse and HD video back in your G-series cameras? There are a whole lot of people who won’t upgrade their G9s until you do.

The update will be ready to download in “mid-March”.

Canon adds 24 and 25fps HD Movie recording [DP Review]

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Noktor ƒ0.95 Lens for Micro Four Thirds Cameras

lens-front

US-based company Noktor has announced the HyperPrime 50mm ƒ0.95 lens for Micro Four Thirds cameras. And if you were wondering, that’s fast. The lens is completely manual, meaning you have to turn collars on the lens to set both aperture and focus. The 50mm focal length is effectively doubled by the M4/3 sensor to the equivalent of 100mm on a full-frame camera.

ƒ0.95 is an incredibly big hole in the lens. It’s more than a stop faster than ƒ1.4, which means it lets in twice as much light. And with that wide aperture comes a seriously shallow depth of field. Focus on a subject’s pupil, for example, and not only will their nose be out-of-focus but so will the edge of the eye itself.

The Noktor, which will cost $750 and go on sale in April, is a near clone of a TV lens from Senko (according to DP Review, it is almost the same as the Senko 50mm ƒ0.95 C-mount CCTV lens). That lens costs around the same.

What we really love is that companies like Noktor are making these niche products available for M4/3 cameras. It seems that someone, somewhere decided that M4/3 owners are an experimental bunch and are happy to buy more unusual gear to play with. We approve.

HyperPrime 50mm f/0.95 [Noktor via DP Review]


Ultra-Light DIY Tent-Pole Flash-Stands

Swedish photographer Peter Karlsson has come up with a lightweight, strong and beautifully designed light stand. The skinny tripods are somewhere between a tent and the rigging of a sailing boat.

Peter, like many Strobists, uses small flash units for his work, the kind that slide onto the top of your camera. These small speedlights are surprisingly powerful and very portable. The problem is the stands they sit on, which are – if not exactly heavy – bulky and weighty enough to make you think twice about carrying more than one or two.

So Peter built these featherweight stands from flexible tent poles. They weight just 440 grams (15.5-ounces) each and extend from just 40cm to two meters (1.3-feet to 6.5-feet). This is less than a third the weight of a regular lighting stand.

The stands are standard tent-poles with elastic cord running through the core. To make one, Peter says that the “only needed skills are to cut rope and tie knots.” Instead of using a standard (heavy) clamp to attach the flash and soft-box to the top, Peter hangs it there with more cord. Height adjustment is done by lengthening or shortening this rigging. It’s not for using outside on a windy day, but for indoor location work, its ideal.

The video runs a bit long, but it is exquisitely shot, and explains all you need to know.

Homegrown ultralight lightstands [Svarteld]

Tent Pole Light Stands: More Details [Stobist]


Nikon D3s Review: A Light Stalker [Review]

A $5000 camera is not within reach for most people. So this Nikon D3s review is a bit different—it’s a peek at the near future of photography where shooting in any lighting condition is possible. It’s really exciting.

ISO Is the New Megapixel: A Case Study

Nikon effectively declared the pixel war over with D3 two years ago: Its $5000 flagship shot a mere 12 megapixels—less than many point-and-shoots—and began the low-light arms race. The D3s again forsakes more megapixels for more light, sticking with 12 megapixels, and it’s a tiny miracle of engineering.

The D3s isn’t a thoughtless product rehash—as you might expect given that Nikon’s simply tacked an ‘s’ onto the end of the D3. Unlike the D300s, which didn’t progress all that far in the two interceding years, the D3s is steady evolution at its best: It offers roughly double the low-light performance as the original D3.

What All This Low Light and ISO Business Means

A brief explanation of low-light digital photography and ISO is in order (click here for the long explanation). The focal point of engineering with the D3s, and other cameras of this caliber, has been boosting their ability to pick up more light (because a photo = light). That photo directly above with a 100 percent crop in the loupe? Taken at night at ISO 102,400.

The D3s uses a completely new sensor that refines elements of the original D3’s sensor, like a new gapless microlens architecture that directs more available light onto the sensor’s photodiodes. With film, ISO speed is a standard that indicates how sensitive the film is to light—higher speeds are more sensitive. With digital cameras, when you set the ISO speed, it’s supposed to be equivalent to the film standard. In low-light conditions, you boost the ISO, so you don’t need a long exposure time or wide open aperture. The problem with cranking up the ISO is that when you boost the camera’s sensitivity to light (the signal) you’re also boosting its sensitivity to noise—which can be sexy with film, but isn’t really with digital photos. The D3s shoots up ISO 102,400, far beyond any film you could buy at Walgreen’s. (Does Walgreen’s still sell film?) At that level, you’re talking night vision, practically, though the resulting noisy ass photo’s nothing you’d want to print.

So, here’s what the D3s offers, practically. In the most common DSLRs that people own, or with the latest crop of Micro Four Thirds cameras, the borderline for what we’d call good ISO performance is around ISO 800. In the original D3, it was ISO 3200, orders of magnitude better.

The D3s doubles the low-light performance of the D3: ISO 6400 photos look just about as clean ISO 3200 photos taken with the D3 (they look good), and ISO 3200 photos are whistle clean to all but the most trained eye, especially if they’re down-res’d to web or print size. ISO 12,800 is the new ISO 6400—the outer limit of acceptably printable. In short, the D3s is the best low-light camera we’ve ever used, a leap beyond last-generation’s low-light killers. You can basically shoot in any lighting condition. That’s incredible.

It’s Built for Photographers

The D3s is built for war zones, and being slung in the mud at 40mph. It weighs nearly 3 pounds, without a lens. Yet it’s well-balanced and supremely comfortable to hold, with the best ergonomics in its class—Canon’s 1D Mark IV feels surprisingly awkward by comparison—so we could shoot for hours on end in the closest thing to gadget blogging’s war zones, CES and the iPad launch, and slug people who got in our way. (The dual CF card slots and ginormous battery help with shooting for hours. We didn’t quite reach the 4,200 shots it’s spec’d for, but we definitely shot a couple thousand photos per charge.)

It feels like what a pro camera should feel like, with almost all of the controls you need at your fingertips—the addition of a dedicated live view button versus the original D3 definitely helped there, though a more natural way to change the ISO setting while using the camera’s vertical grip would be nice.

It is a photographer’s camera, though, to be sure. Even as it shoots a crazyfast 9 frames per second at full-resolution RAW and its 51-point autofocus proved fast and accurate for us at trade shows, Nikon continues to lag behind Canon when it comes to video, with it feeling more tacked on than any of Canon’s shooters—it’s still 720p video using the bleh Motion JPEG codec—it’s functionally better than the D300s, though, with improved autofocus in live view mode. That said, given that Nikon’s announced its first 1080p-shooting camera, we’re hopeful for the seemingly inevitable D700s on the video front, anyway.

Most of our testing took place at CES and the iPad event, which are marked by shitty and ever-changing light conditions, and we’ve never felt more comfortable shooting handheld without a flash or tripod. It’s truly liberating. Light is your bitch—you can shoot wherever, whatever you want. (Especially with a fast lens, but even “slow” lenses suddenly feel eminently more usable.) While auto white balance was never quite perfect, the pop and saturation of the D3s’s colors are just about unbeatable. It’s the ultimate gadget-shooting-in-crappy-conditions camera. Here’s some of posts we used the D3s to shoot:

iPad Hands On
iPad Liveblog
Slayer Espresso
E-Ink Is Dead, Pixel Qi Just Killed It
Ballmer CES Keynote
CES We’re Here

(You can also check out our previous hands on with a pre-production unit for more samples. And for a more technical review, DPReview’s got you covered.) A note: You’ll notice I don’t have a ton of sample photos, and that’s because somehow hundreds of them completely poofed from my hard drive.

The D3s doesn’t operate under any new philosophy, but it does remarkably take the game a step further, revealing with more clarity a world where camera performance doubles roughly every two years. Much like processors, where the tradeoff is more power or more efficiency, the choice is more megapixels or better performance. (But newspapers and monitors are only so big.)

We’re running through Canon’s answer to the D3s, the 1D Mark IV at this very moment, so we’re intensely interested to see who’s wearing what pants at the end of this. Either way, it shows that competition is a very good thing: Everybody wins.

Nikon D3s Review: A Light StalkerThe best low-light camera we’ve ever used

Nikon D3s Review: A Light StalkerFast and accurate 51-point AF to go with its 9FPS rapid fire

Nikon D3s Review: A Light StalkerSolid ergonomics

Nikon D3s Review: A Light StalkerWould prefer a more accessible ISO button

Nikon D3s Review: A Light StalkerThere’s still a major disconnect with video, which lags behind Canon quality and otherwise

Nikon D3s Review: A Light StalkerIt’s $5000, so this amazing low-light performance is out of reach for most people for a few more years (not really a knock against the camera, just a general frowny face)

[Nikon]