Greg7579
Forum Pro
I had a travel experience yesterday that had an impact on my thinking as a Fuji travel-shooter. Teresa and I were sitting in a farmhouse breakfast room at 7 in the morning in the pouring rain yesterday deep in the Lucanian Dolomites down in the boot instep of Southern Italy (Basilicata) just outside an amazing mountaintop town called Castelmezzano. We had stopped for the evening in one of those agriculture - farmhouse places with rooms and farm-to-table meals that are so popular in Italy now. We were seeking shelter and a place to hole-up for the day because it was storming badly. The last week of our 8-week trip here is turning very bad on the weather.
Anyway, we were sitting drinking coffee and in comes this Austrian couple our age speaking German and they saw us sitting there all quiet and they switched to fluent English. I of course immediately spotted what was in his hand. It was a landscape-shooter's 42.4 MP Sony a7RIII -- not the a7III. On it was the Sony 24-70 F2.8. I was sitting there fiddling with my XH-1 with Brick attached, deleting bad images from the crappy weather the day before.
I had my Dell XPS laptop on the table. He pulled out his Mac. We of course started talking because the two couples were alone in the kitchen area there at the farm house.
We talked for two hours and played with each other's cameras. The amazing thing to me was the size-weight. The two rigs were about the same, but the Sony seemed even a bit smaller. I have the RRS L-Bracket mounted, which makes it bigger, but I have to admit I'm not getting the much-touted size advantage with my Fuji rig vs the Sony - at least not from what I could tell. I played with that Sony for an hour and walked around and shot it. I didn't like the feel or ergo of it near as much as the Fuji, but I am of course biased.
I must say too that Helmut was impressed with the Fuji dials and aperture ring. He is an old-school pro and like me, shot film for decades. He knew about Fuji but had never really played with one as he did mine. He loved the ergo, but was extremely dismissive of APS-C, like so many FF guys are. We talked about it for an hour and he was a hard-core FF believer and threw out every anti-APSC dinger I have ever heard. He even said two stops of difference on DR and other hardball dingers about resolution and IQ. I didn't argue with him because his work was mind-blowing good and he was on a roll. He was even making fun of the new a7III because it had such "low" resolution compared to the a7Riii. He was a big believer in landscape resolution. Yes, I did opine that he should go Fuji MF!
He said no way, that his a7riii had as good of IQ as the Fuji MF. I let it go....
Anyway, he fired up the Mac and showed me his website and blog. His landscape images were worthy of being among the greats. He says he studies and copies all the greats. The images were just amazing. Of course, I was probably looking at his best work. But I think I can say that they were the best landscapes I have ever seen. I was stunned actually. He looked at my Flickr at the bazillion images from this trip because they were down in Southern Italy doing the same basic trip for a few weeks, and he was extremely complimentary of my images, so I was much easier on him than I am the Sony guys and drive-by shooters on this Board. I did not resort to using my vast arsenal of FF vs Fuji information and counter-attack zingers. I just let it go.
But really -- his fantastic images had nothing to do with the camera if you ask me. This guy was an artist. I am going to contact him today and ask if I can attach his link and info here. If he says OK, I will. I need to check him out, because I think I am going to find out this guy is a well-known landscape pro in Europe. He shoots only landscape - nothing else, and all hand-held.
I must admit, as always with Sony I am tempted … really tempted. But I love the XH-1 and the Fuji ergo. I love the Fuji glass. If I got that 42 MP FF Sony, it would not improve my landscapes.
You guys are lucky! I just got good WiFi and posted 100 more images from this amazing Southern Italy trip. We just made a run back to Naples and I was almost on the street because every room in and near Naples is booked because it is one of their biggest Holidays, and I was totally unaware of that bit of key information. It s pouring rain and this is going to be another long day of no shooting. Fly out of Rome Wednesday. Been gone two months.
Greg Johnson, San Antonio, Texas
https://www.flickr.com/photos/139148982@N02/albums
Anyway, we were sitting drinking coffee and in comes this Austrian couple our age speaking German and they saw us sitting there all quiet and they switched to fluent English. I of course immediately spotted what was in his hand. It was a landscape-shooter's 42.4 MP Sony a7RIII -- not the a7III. On it was the Sony 24-70 F2.8. I was sitting there fiddling with my XH-1 with Brick attached, deleting bad images from the crappy weather the day before.
I had my Dell XPS laptop on the table. He pulled out his Mac. We of course started talking because the two couples were alone in the kitchen area there at the farm house.
We talked for two hours and played with each other's cameras. The amazing thing to me was the size-weight. The two rigs were about the same, but the Sony seemed even a bit smaller. I have the RRS L-Bracket mounted, which makes it bigger, but I have to admit I'm not getting the much-touted size advantage with my Fuji rig vs the Sony - at least not from what I could tell. I played with that Sony for an hour and walked around and shot it. I didn't like the feel or ergo of it near as much as the Fuji, but I am of course biased.
I must say too that Helmut was impressed with the Fuji dials and aperture ring. He is an old-school pro and like me, shot film for decades. He knew about Fuji but had never really played with one as he did mine. He loved the ergo, but was extremely dismissive of APS-C, like so many FF guys are. We talked about it for an hour and he was a hard-core FF believer and threw out every anti-APSC dinger I have ever heard. He even said two stops of difference on DR and other hardball dingers about resolution and IQ. I didn't argue with him because his work was mind-blowing good and he was on a roll. He was even making fun of the new a7III because it had such "low" resolution compared to the a7Riii. He was a big believer in landscape resolution. Yes, I did opine that he should go Fuji MF!
Anyway, he fired up the Mac and showed me his website and blog. His landscape images were worthy of being among the greats. He says he studies and copies all the greats. The images were just amazing. Of course, I was probably looking at his best work. But I think I can say that they were the best landscapes I have ever seen. I was stunned actually. He looked at my Flickr at the bazillion images from this trip because they were down in Southern Italy doing the same basic trip for a few weeks, and he was extremely complimentary of my images, so I was much easier on him than I am the Sony guys and drive-by shooters on this Board. I did not resort to using my vast arsenal of FF vs Fuji information and counter-attack zingers. I just let it go.
But really -- his fantastic images had nothing to do with the camera if you ask me. This guy was an artist. I am going to contact him today and ask if I can attach his link and info here. If he says OK, I will. I need to check him out, because I think I am going to find out this guy is a well-known landscape pro in Europe. He shoots only landscape - nothing else, and all hand-held.
I must admit, as always with Sony I am tempted … really tempted. But I love the XH-1 and the Fuji ergo. I love the Fuji glass. If I got that 42 MP FF Sony, it would not improve my landscapes.
You guys are lucky! I just got good WiFi and posted 100 more images from this amazing Southern Italy trip. We just made a run back to Naples and I was almost on the street because every room in and near Naples is booked because it is one of their biggest Holidays, and I was totally unaware of that bit of key information. It s pouring rain and this is going to be another long day of no shooting. Fly out of Rome Wednesday. Been gone two months.
Greg Johnson, San Antonio, Texas
https://www.flickr.com/photos/139148982@N02/albums
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