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"Gear" doesn't Matter .... Does it?

Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2007 10:23 am
by Andy
Last weekend, I spent two days photographing waterfalls and the last of the fall Color in Michigan's "UP." My sister and her husband were with me the whole time. Last fall, I was in Vermont for a week in October and they were with me for 3 or 4 days of that trip, too. I shoot with a Nikon D200 DSLR and several different lenses, 99% of the time on a tripod with a cable release.

My sister carries an Olympus Point & Shoot. For most of that time, she used the "all automatic" features on the camera (something I cannot wholeheartedly recommend), handheld. Last weekend, a couple of the shots we took were side-by-side and she started looking at my LCD after the shot was taken. Her comment was "my skies are all white" or my subject is too dark" led me to take a minute to see if her P&S camera had a way to control the exposure. She had an exposure lock button and for a "quick fix" I explained to her how to "meter" the area she wanted to have properly exposed and lock it and re-compose. I know that was a gross oversimplification of metering and not entirely correct, but in the field, shooting was not the best time to delve into that.

This weekend, I found some time to "surf" and downloaded the Use Guide to her model camera. I found that it has a spot-metering feature, a choice of Manual, A-priority or SS-priority, up to 2 stops of exposure compensation both directions (+ or -) in 1/3 stop increments, as well as a few other features. I would like to see her have a DSLR, but the economics aren't there, presently. So I will be trying to work with her to begin to learn some of the techniques and theory of metering and shutter speed and aperature choices with her P&S.

We have all heard the ("hackneyed" IMO) phrase, that Ansel Adams could have made a beautiful photo with a cardboard pinhole camera. I don't dispute that, but I don't really want to do it, because for me, it is like trading my table saw for a handsaw. But, it makes me wonder just how viable a P&S with a tripod is for the kind of photo scenics we often see on this site? I wonder what people think, after we dispense with the above argument, about whether "gear" really does matter, and why. And whether anyone here has had experience making high quality photos with a P&S digital?

Posted: Tue Nov 06, 2007 6:38 pm
by pwt54
I had an olympus a couple years ago and did not like the picture quality. I bought a canon SD500 and had a great time with it. I gave that to my neice so she could have a camera and bought a canon A 710is. I like this camera, but I think the SD500 took a better picture. For P&S cameras it's picture quality over features. There aren't that many features. My experience and many reviews rate canon number 1 for P&S with nikon and panasonic right behind. I'm not sure about the olympus, but I've had better luck with the AE setting than with shutter speed on both my canon and panasonic.

Posted: Wed Nov 07, 2007 10:14 am
by Andy
Paul: Picture quality, in my opinion, is a function of the camera to an extent. But it is also a function of what digital photographers now call "post processing."

Back in "the day" we all shot some version of a film camera. Most P&S shooters shot color negative films, while a lot of so-called "serious " shooters shot either transparency (slide) film and/or B&W film. Most of us realized that there were a number of film choices out there and the each offered a different "palette" of colors.

Digital cameras have a strong parallel, in that each different electronic sensor can have its own characteristics. And, to complicate matters, each manufacturer (particularly in the P&S models--because the consumer wants a "good" out of the box result) has its own software algorithms build into the camera processor. The majority of P&S cameras offer jpg format images (which is sort of a final result). This requires in-camera processing.

My research pretty much agrees with yours. I strongly considered the Canon G series when I bought my first digital camera. I ultimately purchased a Nikon because I know it was a "bridge" to a DSLR and did not want to have too many different electronic file formats (I don't shoot in jpg, but take advantage of my cameras' RAW formats). But the Canon's do produce a pretty nice out of the box result.

However, most digital electronic image need some post-processing work to really get the most from them. The pure digital image is made from (usually square) pixels (you can see that if you magnify a photo enough in your viewing software). Because of electronics I cannot begin to understand -- much less explain, virtually all sensors have a filter on them which by its nature creates some "unsharpness" ( I am sure that is a word in SOMEBODY's dictionary :) ). So, virtually every image needs to be "sharpened" by software. Again most cameras provide for the ability to do that in camera. The sharpening algorithms in the camera vary by manufacturer (and, I suspect, model). But generally they are thought to be a rather blunt instrument and if you have post-processing software can do a much better job of sharpening. I leave all the adjustments for sharpening, color, contrast, etc. OFF on my camera. At first download they are immediately disappointing. But they always look better with some processing. Of course, its a matter of preference. Most folks, I would guess, want a good image straight from the camera and do not want to spend hours working on them after the fact. Some of us find the "digital darkroom" nearly as fascinating as being there to originally capture the image.

I guess my point is that the un-adjusted image from a number of different cameras might surprise people with good post processing.

Nice to have some discussion here, especially since we are all going through foliage - withdrawal.

Posted: Wed Nov 14, 2007 11:01 am
by pwt54
Abby, I see you like doing close-ups of wildflowers. I got hooked on that this spring. I went up to the northeast kingdom and got some great shots of painted trilliums and pink lady's slippers along the 4 Mile Road and other roads in that area. On June 18th I was wandering around the back roads in Woodbury when I found a cluster of Showy Lady's Slippers on the Dog Pond Road. WOW, they are beautiful ! Take route 14 to South Woodbury and take the Nelson Hill Road across from the Church. Drive about 1/2 of a mile and look for the Dog Pond Road on the right. Drive about a mile and the Dog Pond Rd goes right with the Tebbets going straight ahead( this road goes under a barn about a mile ahead). Turn right onto the Dog Pond Rd and look for the Wheeler Hill RD on the right. About 1/2 a mile further look for a mail box on the right with the number 1580 and park just past it. The flowers are across the road. Bring boots.
I'm still not sure how to post photos, but if you go to webshots.com and put "vermont springtime wildflowers" in the search engine you can see the photos of the wildflowers I photographed this spring.

Posted: Fri Nov 16, 2007 11:07 am
by Andy
I have a small portfolio of flower closeups -- wild and "tame" (hopefully to be viewed on my website which is now "Under construction." I always keep barn boots, kneepads a tarp and coveralls in my car during that time of the year. My wife used to worry about what the neighbors would think about me lying on my stomach with my tripod as flat to the ground as I could get it, trying to get that "just right" view of the flower. I never worried -- I already know I am "nuts" anyway :)