I will try to do a more detailed review later.
My first impressions are:
The Childe Jessica. And to think SHE tells off her nephews for making silly faces when SHE wants to take a picture!
Oh no! Not a brick wall. Well, it was there! You can see the barrel distortion.
But the barrel distortion is generally immaterial in general picture taking. I won’t give it a thought.
The ratings below are a bit of a trick. I've tagged stuff I haven't done so far.
Kids: Yes, definitely, both because it looks less like a "real" camera than my G6 which will make them less defensive, and also because of the GM1's quick response.
Action/sports: What does that mean? A local football match? The GM1 will be not much chop. Bowls? Yep, it will be fine. Road cycling? Yep again. And so on and so forth.
Landscapes: No worries. Maybe excellent, although surprisingly, which it has HDR built-in, it appears that it does not do panoramas as the G6 does.
Portraits: Yes, it is good. And if we are talking spontaneous stuff, it could be rated very good.
Low light: The sensor has the capability; faster lenses can be fitted. Focusing in low light is excellent.
Flash: Social stuff -- yes, fine.
Studio: I put it down as "acceptable" at first. In fact, one thing I will do with this camera is quick and dirty food shots. Then I thought I would just demonstrate that, so I set up a Q&D still life with a bit of cheese and an apricot. The results -- OOC except for resizing:
[ATTACH alt="Set on "natural" using diffused window light. The pic is a little over-exposed. I could have reduced it 1 stop/1 EV (but I haven't worked out how, yet, in P mode. I will do that at once."]media_2806698[/ATTACH]
Set on "natural" using diffused window light. The pic is a little over-exposed. I could have reduced it 1 stop/1 EV (but I haven't worked out how, yet, in P mode. I will do that at once.
[ATTACH alt="Having returned the cheese to the fridge, I bethought me that it might be nice to try "vivid" mode. So I did on the apricot. Stronger coloring; note the color change in the board. Same exposure as the "natural"."]media_2806700[/ATTACH]
Having returned the cheese to the fridge, I bethought me that it might be nice to try "vivid" mode. So I did on the apricot. Stronger coloring; note the color change in the board. Same exposure as the "natural".
Then I thought to stick in a 100% crop. Note that this is at the camera's self-selected 3200 ISO. Pretty darned good, eh? it prompted me to upgrade the low light performance.
This outcome, of course, is in continuous light; you wouldn't be using this camera with a studio flash set up. So I have put it down as "good", but maybe "okay" is a better rating, just as I am sure the rating for kids and pets is going to go to excellent when I get down to photographing the grandchildren (but not pets -- I don't have any and can't be bothered!)
Cheers, geoff
--
Geoffrey Heard
Down and out in Rabaul in the South Pacific
pngtimetraveller.blogspot.com
My first impressions are:
- This camera is a tiny delight. It makes me smile just to see it sitting on the table waiting to be taken for a walk!
- In use, the camera is just as small and compact as I imagined it would be and as it looked in the store.
- The controls are small but I have no difficulty using them with my big and somewhat arthriticky fingers. They are adequate and very sensible; the movement of the dials, etc. is solid. Accidental settings are unlikely.
- The pop-up flash is more robust than I expected it to be, but I will still treat it with kid gloves.
- Both flash and non-flash auto exposure is very good.
- Start-up is very quick.
- The little zoom is nice and sharp. Not quite long enough? You have a high quality 16MPX image to crop a piece out of. At some time in the distant future there is the potential for the movement from retracted to minimum zoom to become sloppy (you twist against a resistance rather than have a button as Oly has in its retracting lenses) but who knows -- I might have dropped off the twig and handed in my lunch pail by then.
- The lens has significant barrel distortion at the 12mm end and there might be a little pincushion distortion at the 32mm end, but in normal use, they are not a problem. (Nobody has sent in sample shots to ePaperpress for PTLens correction as yet, it seems -- I might just do so myself if I can get time and the lighting right in the next few days.)
- I have discarded the strap that came with it and fitted it with a broad, black elastic sling so it hangs down in front of me ready for instant use.
- The JPEGs the camera produces are very nice; excellent colors both indoors and out, not overcooked at all, and with a nice tonal range. All the pictures below are "natural" mode (I think) except for the last two, which are "vivid".
- The LCD screen is very good but in use, there will be times when my framing will be a bit guess and by god when the reflections on my glasses are added to the reflections on the screen in bright light.
- The camera's response is very fast, the train shot, with the train still traveling at about 30kph, is virtually exactly as I framed it on the LCD.
- I am going to miss an articulated screen and an EVF. Too bad -- I have these on the G6. With the GM1, adding them would add weight and size, defeating the whole purpose of this camera.
- Small as the camera is, it handles well with the Panny 40-150 attached. It is not a toy.
The Childe Jessica. And to think SHE tells off her nephews for making silly faces when SHE wants to take a picture!
Oh no! Not a brick wall. Well, it was there! You can see the barrel distortion.
But the barrel distortion is generally immaterial in general picture taking. I won’t give it a thought.
The ratings below are a bit of a trick. I've tagged stuff I haven't done so far.
Kids: Yes, definitely, both because it looks less like a "real" camera than my G6 which will make them less defensive, and also because of the GM1's quick response.
Action/sports: What does that mean? A local football match? The GM1 will be not much chop. Bowls? Yep, it will be fine. Road cycling? Yep again. And so on and so forth.
Landscapes: No worries. Maybe excellent, although surprisingly, which it has HDR built-in, it appears that it does not do panoramas as the G6 does.
Portraits: Yes, it is good. And if we are talking spontaneous stuff, it could be rated very good.
Low light: The sensor has the capability; faster lenses can be fitted. Focusing in low light is excellent.
Flash: Social stuff -- yes, fine.
Studio: I put it down as "acceptable" at first. In fact, one thing I will do with this camera is quick and dirty food shots. Then I thought I would just demonstrate that, so I set up a Q&D still life with a bit of cheese and an apricot. The results -- OOC except for resizing:
[ATTACH alt="Set on "natural" using diffused window light. The pic is a little over-exposed. I could have reduced it 1 stop/1 EV (but I haven't worked out how, yet, in P mode. I will do that at once."]media_2806698[/ATTACH]
Set on "natural" using diffused window light. The pic is a little over-exposed. I could have reduced it 1 stop/1 EV (but I haven't worked out how, yet, in P mode. I will do that at once.
[ATTACH alt="Having returned the cheese to the fridge, I bethought me that it might be nice to try "vivid" mode. So I did on the apricot. Stronger coloring; note the color change in the board. Same exposure as the "natural"."]media_2806700[/ATTACH]
Having returned the cheese to the fridge, I bethought me that it might be nice to try "vivid" mode. So I did on the apricot. Stronger coloring; note the color change in the board. Same exposure as the "natural".
Then I thought to stick in a 100% crop. Note that this is at the camera's self-selected 3200 ISO. Pretty darned good, eh? it prompted me to upgrade the low light performance.
This outcome, of course, is in continuous light; you wouldn't be using this camera with a studio flash set up. So I have put it down as "good", but maybe "okay" is a better rating, just as I am sure the rating for kids and pets is going to go to excellent when I get down to photographing the grandchildren (but not pets -- I don't have any and can't be bothered!)
Cheers, geoff
--
Geoffrey Heard
Down and out in Rabaul in the South Pacific
Return to Karai Komana
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