Panasonic Leica 200mm f2.8, a Micro Four Thirds masterpiece – RED35 Review
Today deals at Amazon, BHphoto, Adorama, Amazon DE, Amazon UK, Amazon FR, Amazon IT.
Which is my Holiday Camera? Lumix GX1, GX8, G9, Olympus E-M1 mk1 or mk2. See if you can decide (That Micro 4/3 Guy)
The Nine Volt AirCap Camera Body Cap Hides an Apple AirTag (PetaPixel).
Samsung Announces Durable T7 Shield Portable SSDs (Explora).
Vignetting in Photography & Film: How to Use It (42West).
One popular question I get asked – which lens should I get for my Micro Four Thirds camera? I want a wide angle prime, should I get Olympus 12mm F2 or Panasonic 14mm F2.5? How about 15mm F1.7? So I made this video to answer these questions!
Today deals at Amazon, BHphoto, Adorama, Amazon DE, Amazon UK, Amazon FR, Amazon IT.
Which is my Holiday Camera? Lumix GX1, GX8, G9, Olympus E-M1 mk1 or mk2. See if you can decide (That Micro 4/3 Guy)
Lichtstarkes Weitwinkel für MFT – Leica DG Summilux f1.7 9mm 📷 Krolop&Gerst
Edelkrone JibONE v2 Ultra-Compact Motorized Jib: New and Improved (Explora).
Best Tech Products for Your Next Beach Trip (42West).
I’m happy to see that DxO continues to develop and improve the Nik Collection. For years, I held onto the free version Google released, stashing the installer on various drives and laptops, lest I ever lost track of it and access to my beloved Silver Efex Pro. With Collection 5, the welcome interface refresh from last year comes to more apps in the suite. Now, all four creative arms—Analog Efex, Color Efex, Silver Efex, and Viveza—offer a consistent user experience. They also all include the ability to rename U-Points and add them to presets, making up for the somewhat inconsistent experience from Collection 4. We’re also glad to see some level of nondestructive editing in the suite. It’s not quite as convenient as Raw processing and this feature certainly requires a lot of space on your hard drive, but you may find the option to go back and make edits to an image worthwhile. The addition of batch processing can help speed up certain workflows, too. The suite continues to be a good pick for photographers who enjoy creative editing, and longtime users should appreciate that updates keep it going on newer systems. We’d love to see the developers pay attention to Apple Silicon for the next update, though I admit there were no hiccups with Rosetta 2 emulation when I tested the software on a Mac Studio. Support for Apple chips obviously doesn’t matter if you prefer working in Windows. We’re also glad to see some level of nondestructive editing in the suite. It’s not quite as convenient as Raw processing and this feature certainly requires a lot of space on your hard drive, but you may find the option to go back and make edits to an image worthwhile. The addition of batch processing can help speed up certain workflows, too.