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Author Topic: The future of medium format  (Read 65861 times)

ErikKaffehr

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #160 on: December 18, 2012, 10:00:44 pm »

Hi Guy,

My interest is coming much from my background in engineering. I want to find out.

My interest for MF is mainly theoretical, I did consider MF from time to time, but I find cost of entry a bit high. Also I'm not negative about MF, but there are some statements which I have issue with. The article that "tho_mas" was commenting on was not really a comparison of DSLR to MF but more of a drill down in the data behind.

This is the summary of my article: http://echophoto.dnsalias.net/ekr/index.php/photoarticles/71-mf-digital-myths-or-facts?start=11

I don't think it's pro or contra MF.

Best regards
Erik

Erik appreciate your reply and honestly was just making a point on copyright and not accusing you of anything. Others do a fine job of that. LOL

More my point was a lot of these tests have a lot of variables in them that you really have to watch how carefully things are done. Testing is very hard when your dealing with apples and oranges. I have done these tests and a lot of them I simply did not post because its just not worth my time or energy a lot of the times plus people use them in negative ways to either system. I have compared all three Phase backs against a D800 and D800e. I know what I need to know between them and end of day all I care about so I do ignore many of these comparisons just simply too much going on about it. I really have no agenda either way. I like both systems and when the time is right I will jump back in to MF. Regardless of all the millions of posts between them I mostly ignore a lot of them simply because we pick features, functions, ergos and image quality for each individual needs. My needs are very different than others and as it should be. Anyway testing is great for a lot folks to see specific details that one wants to know but the results are always going to face certain variables that are hard to overcome correctly especially between systems. Again my point carefully analyze what's being done that's my only point. Honestly if you want to get into MF or not but want to know than get with a dealer test it yourself and make a call for yourself. DT and CI would be happy to rent you a system. If you need help there let me know be glad to help.
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ErikKaffehr

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #161 on: December 18, 2012, 10:04:32 pm »

You asked "who cares"? Just responding to your question ;-)

Erik





I know. Live View, however, will not replace a groundglass. When Stefan will remove the sliding back and groundglass only because future DBs provide Live View ... well, then I'll neither buy a H-Cam nor an Alpa FPS ;-)

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Erik Kaffehr
 

ErikKaffehr

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #162 on: December 18, 2012, 11:21:39 pm »

Hi,

The reason I started this thread I really because there was another thread about the demise of medium format.

My take is that MF needs to maintain a critical mass. I guess that just having a bunch of satisfied customers may not be sufficient for that critical mass to be upheld. People using five year old backs don't generate income for Phase and Hasselblad, or do they?

- They need existing customers upgrading to latest stuff or reinvesting in MF otherwise
- Expand into new markets, I have seen that Phase One is doing that and that is a good thing
- They need new customers

Keeping development, manufacture, service and value added resale channels takes a lot money.

The other issue on my mind was some communication I had with Stefan Steib (the developer of the Hartblei H-Cam). Stefan feels that MFD industry needs to cooperate to ensure long time survival.

Best regards
Erik



« Last Edit: December 19, 2012, 07:28:51 am by ErikKaffehr »
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FredBGG

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #163 on: December 19, 2012, 02:16:57 am »

Maybe you can explain why I have never heard the same story from various Hasselblad staff when ever I asked about the manufacturing of H system even years ago.

Well, this Hasselblad employee is certainly telling the same story:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kmow2-PMq5g&feature=youtu.be


What I meant is that each time I asked a Hasselblad employee or rep about the H series /Fuji relationship I get different stories each time, even right when
the H came out.

Regarding the video..... there are a few interesting points and quite a lot said, but still leaving quite a few questions.
It's interesting that when the question of what lenses are better was asked Ove did not say anything about Hasselblad designing the lenses as claimed by
Nick-T earlier in this thread. I also find the part about the focusing point interesting....

http://youtu.be/Kmow2-PMq5g?t=8m49s

He claims that they only used one focusing point because as a manufacturer they were limited buy what components they could find on the market and that all the ones available were for 35mm and that would have meant having all the focus points clusters in the center.
That part is really rather bogus. First of all the components for 35mm would not work at all as the mirror box of an MF camera is a completely different size and would need to be rebuilt
completely for the different lens light paths in the body. Even if they focus points were clustered they would still cover a very large area of the screen if a system similar to the d700 or d800 were used.
Also Pentax can doe it with the 645D as well as Leica with the s2 and s3. Hasselblad is at it's 5th generation of the camera and they can't do it?????

Another part that is bogus is the one on lens correction

http://youtu.be/Kmow2-PMq5g?t=4m28s

He claims that only Hasselblad knows the focusing distance and that the others don't use focus distance values and that their corrections just don't work.

This is bullshit.....

Canon and Nikon record focus distance in the metadata



and DXO as well as Adobe use focus distance for corrections as well as zoom focal length.

From DXO
Quote
DxO Optics Pro automatically corrects all types of lens distortion by taking into account such signification factors as the focal point and focusing distance.


From Adobe
Quote
Shooting Iteration: A single “set” of images of the printed calibration chart, shot with the user’s desired camera/lens combination.
 An iteration (set) of images should have constant camera settings throughout and be of a single camera body and lens model.
The lens should be set to a single aperture, focal length, and relative focus distance (focus should remain about the same from shot to shot) for a single iteration.
A typical iteration consists of nine images in the set.
Different iterations may be shot and profiled for the same camera/lens combination while using a different aperture, focal length, or focus distance for each respective shooting iteration.

Also when asked why the Hasselblad Zeiss lenses don't have software correction he answers that they haven't done it yet... well they've had years and years to do it!

With Adobe's lens profile creator you can make your own in an hour or so for each lens.  
« Last Edit: December 19, 2012, 05:28:05 am by FredBGG »
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bcooter

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #164 on: December 19, 2012, 05:24:02 am »



Wall street has a term. 

The Greater Fool.   

The people that buy long, sell short hoping for a positive financial reward.

Nearly all Artists, photographers especially qualify.

Small entrepreneurial companies like Phase/Leaf/Hasselblad/RED also.

The upside is they move the ball forward, offer diversity, produce a product not just for maximum corporate bottom line and the throngs of people shopping at Best Buy, but build specialty equipment that is different, for anyone that wants a choice.

For people that just want to work differently. 

Apple, prior to the I-world was the greater fool, Phase/Leaf/Hasselblad fall into this group and thank God, because without them we would all be shooting with whatever plastic cameras large conglomerates offered and all of us would be processing out orange flesh toned  jpegs in one software suite.

This thread started out as a semi positive and like all of these threads, is pushed by a few people with a negative agenda, with every word twisted to suit a purpose that doesn't do anything for anyone.

It's like Sarah Palin invaded a photography forum.

Which is a shame because every day, a lot of greater fools pick up every type of camera and shoot something interesting.

They don't care what I or anyone use, what is more logical, cheaper, faster or easier.  They use what they use because they believe it suits their purpose.

Those are the stories worth listening to and it's a shame we don't have more of them.


Julia Lescova.
Photographed with RED R1 camera.
Broncolor 800 Watt HMI Key light, with Par reflector.
Fill 4-4'x8' white foam core with one matthews shiny board on lower portion of stage, out of frame, for fill.


Photographed with Kodak DCS 760
Key light, Matthews shiny boards (2)
Backlight, natural sun.
Rain from Sprinkler heads and 10,000 gallon water truck


Photographed with Phase One P21+
Key Light, Kobal Bron 800 Watt with Par Reflector
Background lights, two Broncolor 575 HMI's with 1/2 spun.

All of these cameras are different formats.  All of them were purchased and used by me because I liked them.

Nothing more.




IMO

BC




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tho_mas

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #165 on: December 19, 2012, 10:02:50 am »

bcooter: great post! ... as always...
Thanks!
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Ken Doo

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #166 on: December 19, 2012, 10:42:22 am »

bcooter: great post! ... as always...
Thanks!

+1.  bcooter right on target.  Except for that part about Sarah Palin.  I'm no fan of Sarah Palin, but we shouldn't insult her....  ;D

Ed Foster, Jr.

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #167 on: December 19, 2012, 11:59:11 am »

A
...They use what they use because they believe it suits their purpose.
Those are the stories worth listening to and it's a shame we don't have more of them.

A breath of fresh air, BC, Thanks!

Ed
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ErikKaffehr

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Re: The future of medium format, OK to close the thread?!
« Reply #168 on: December 19, 2012, 02:36:51 pm »

Hi,

I agree that we had a great contribution from 'BC' and some great pictures. I think the thread is drying up and what needs to be said has been said. So, if nobody minds, I'll close the thread tomorrow. OK?

Thanks for all contributions!

Best regards
Erik
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FredBGG

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #169 on: December 19, 2012, 02:55:26 pm »


The upside is they move the ball forward, offer diversity, produce a product not just for maximum corporate bottom line and the throngs of people shopping at Best Buy, but build specialty equipment that is different, for anyone that wants a choice.

For people that just want to work differently.  

Apple, prior to the I-world was the greater fool, Phase/Leaf/Hasselblad fall into this group and thank God, because without them we would all be shooting with whatever plastic cameras large conglomerates offered and all of us would be processing out orange flesh toned  jpegs in one software suite.
IMO

BC


Refreshing? I find this post is borderline snobbery.

the throngs of people shopping at best buy????

I'd like also like to point out that the Hasselblad H would pretty much not exist without the "conglomerate" Fuji. And if we want to talk about choice....
Fuji makes luxury compacts, leading optical and EVF in the same camera and STILL MAKES FILM CAMERAS.

Your beloved and fabulous Contax was made by a conglomerate that also made point an shoots.

If we really want to talk about choice for ANYONE. I think it is indisputable that Nikon and Canon have empowered photographer
with a range of choice that is outstanding. For a fraction of the price they have reached IQ that rivals MF at the mid to entry level and is close to the top of the line and with a much vaster
selection of lenses, accessories and functionality.

You also won't find a company like Canon or Nikon putting out this type of bullshit
that is totally disrespectful of photographers:

Quote
A Hasselblad camera is not a reward for having achieved a successful career. A Hasselblad camera is the tool with which you build your successful career to begin with.
There is never any time like the present to start building for the future. And if you think 35mm is good enough for this stage of your career, then you’d better hope that your clients are also willing to settle for “good enough”. The best clients, however, are almost never willing to settle for “good enough”. And why should they, when there are photographers out there who can provide the best? And providing the best is what Hasselblad and the new H5D are all about.

Regarding the disparaging comment of orange skin tones... that is just plain silly and misleading.
I would suggest reader of this thread pop over to flickr and look at the absolutely lovely NATURAL skin tones that this lovely lady achieves with her Nikon

http://www.flickr.com/photos/laurenrosenbaum/

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ErikKaffehr

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #170 on: December 19, 2012, 03:20:40 pm »

Hi Fred,

I see what you mean. On the other hand, BC has a point that small companies do some thinking out of the box and try to make stuff outside the main stream. I would say that many belowed products belong there. The Fuji 68 (a camera I admire), Mamiya RZ67 and also Contax 645 and the Hy6. In the end I ended up with a Pentax 67 and Minolta/Sony stuff.

For my part I'm pretty mch interested in both technology, physics and photography. But I see myself as an engineer having photography as his hobby, not an artist.

Best regards
Erik

Refreshing? I find this post is borderline snobbery.

the throngs of people shopping at best buy????

I'd like also like to point out that the Hasselblad H would pretty much not exist without the "conglomerate" Fuji. And if we want to talk about choice....
Fuji makes luxury compacts, leading optical and EVF in the same camera and STILL MAKES FILM CAMERAS.

Your beloved and fabulous Contax was made by a conglomerate that also made point an shoots.

If we really want to talk about choice for ANYONE. I think it is indisputable that Nikon and Canon have empowered photographer
with a range of choice that is outstanding. For a fraction of the price they have reached IQ that rivals MF at the mid to entry level and is close to the top of the line and with a much vaster
selection of lenses, accessories and functionality.

You also won't find a company like Canon or Nikon putting out this type of bullshit
that is totally disrespectful of photographers:

Regarding the disparaging comment of orange skin tones... that is just plain silly and misleading.
I would suggest reader of this thread pop over to flickr and look at the absolutely lovely NATURAL skin tones that this lovely lady achieves with her Nikon

http://www.flickr.com/photos/laurenrosenbaum/


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Gel

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #171 on: December 19, 2012, 03:43:31 pm »

For 95% of clients, 35mm is good enough.

I'll say this now, I did a reasonably thorough test and the Canon 5D3 was almost indistinguishable from the Phase One P25
Products move on, the 5D3 wouldn't be indistinguishable from the H4D 60 though, but in 4 years time, will it be the same with the 5D4?

Bcooter illustrated some fine examples, the last two of which could be shot on today's latest cameras. So the question is, what's good enough?

Is there enough business for people to pick up a Hassy and start charging $1000 a day? I don't think there is.
That's the problem. The barrier to entry isn't that high, just buy a used H3D. There is just a distinct lack of clients who will pay enough to justify the spend.

Nikon were damn smart with that thar D800. Obvious strengths of the Medium format back = High Pixel Count, Depth of field due to the larger format.
So make something that targets landscape photographers who don't mind Depth of Field that much and make it have huge pixels with great shadow pull.

Chip, chip, chip away at the user base. I guess they have to do something to increase DSLR sales in face of the reduced number of compacts being sold (because people are using phones instead)

yaya

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #172 on: December 19, 2012, 04:07:27 pm »

Erik,

I think that this thread, unfortunately, has exhausted itself.

Any meaningful discussion that people are trying to develop on this forum gets killed by someone who believes that medium format, in order to have a future, has to either turn into 35mm digital or to become an already dead 6x8 film camera system.

As this year is coming to its end I suggest that we all take some time off and think about the future of this forum and what kind of place we want it to be next year...

Happy holidays

Yair
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Nick-T

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #173 on: December 19, 2012, 04:10:53 pm »


Regarding the disparaging comment of orange skin tones... that is just plain silly and misleading.


Heaven forbid anyone should make silly and misleading comments Fred!
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Gel

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #174 on: December 19, 2012, 04:24:36 pm »


Regarding the disparaging comment of orange skin tones... that is just plain silly and misleading.


I see them in my 5D2, 5D3 and 1Dx files.

Maybe I should switch to Nikon, or just accept it's a downside to CMOS tech.

Has anyone mentioned Hitler yet?

Rob C

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #175 on: December 19, 2012, 06:04:52 pm »

Harry H. C!

MF was great for what it was used to accomplish in the recent past, as I guess it still is today; 35mm /135) was also perfect for its uses and still is, if not even more so with the wonderfully high ISO possibilities it offers.

The thousand bucks a day jobs? They certainly did exist, and probably much more so now if only because of the lower value of money; but the thing about MF, then, was that it was a simple tool to operate, required no more investment than the camera and the few focal lengths that you needed, and I got by with three: 50, 80 asnd 150mm. The rest, even the developing tanks were the same because reels were able to accomodate different formats and one enlarger could usually handle from 135 to 6x7 or at least 6x6.

It wasn't that big a financial frontier, but now it most certainly is, cash being the single greatest obstacle that I've read here as barrier to MF popularity (as in buying the damned thing).

Those already up in the higher planes of the business won't feel any pinch buying; the rest do.

Looking at all the shots posted here and in other threads on the topic, on the monitor there isn't much difference. At the end of the day, buy what you want/can afford and what suits your way of shooting. The 'blad 500 Series and all the F, F2, F3 and not F4 Nikons were perfectly good tools for me and none required any greatly different technique, and that was without any idea of tethering yet on the horizon. Now, all people talk about is technique and learning curves: what fun!

Seems to me that digital has opened new doors for some and errected impossible barriers for others. So much for it being the great new democracy.

Coot produces lovely work and so does Fred; let's not get into dumb slanging matches over bloody camera manufacturers - they ain't worth it - all they want is your money, not your love.

Rob C

Don Libby

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #176 on: December 19, 2012, 06:23:48 pm »

This thread reminds me of the question - what's the largest sexual organ?  The answer is the brain.  

So what's the future of MF?  That question while valid can also be asked "What's the future of photography".  While just about any camera is capable of producing stunning work it's the brain behind the system that tells it where to go.  It's the brain behind the final outcome in post.

For some the future holds great promise while for others it's nothing but doom and gloom.  

Just my 2¢ worth after a great lunch......

yaya

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #177 on: December 19, 2012, 06:55:08 pm »

let's not get into dumb slanging matches over bloody camera manufacturers - they ain't worth it - all they want is your money, not your love.

Not here for you money Rob, no worries ;)
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FredBGG

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #178 on: December 20, 2012, 03:01:13 am »


Wall street has a term. 

The Greater Fool.   

The people that buy long, sell short hoping for a positive financial reward.

Nearly all Artists, photographers especially qualify.

Small entrepreneurial companies like Phase/Leaf/Hasselblad/RED also.........

BC

The Greater Fool Theory means something else:
Quote
A theory that states it is possible to make money by buying securities,
whether overvalued or not, and later selling them at a profit because there will
always be someone (a bigger or greater fool) who is willing to pay the higher price.

Quote
The selling of a security that the seller does not own,
or any sale that is completed by the delivery of a security borrowed by the seller.
Short sellers assume that they will be able to buy the stock at a lower amount
than the price at which they sold short.

Neither of these have anything to do with taking high quality and or artistic images.
If anything it may have something to do with art dealers (or maybe equipment dealers).

I think if we look at the greater fool theory it really does not hold up at all as far as MFD goes.
Hell just look at used prices of current generation MFDB.

Ebay used from an ebay member since 2003 with a 100% favorable feedback based in New York:
Phase One IQ140 in exellent condition.
Sold for only $ 12,000.
New it costs $ 21,990
Loss            $ 11,990   45% Loss 

Phase One "Schneider" 110mm 2.8:
Sold for only $ 2,250
New it costs $ 4,790
Loss            $ 2540      53% Loss

Phase One DF
Sold for only $ 2,800
New it costs $ 5,900
Loss            $ 3,100     52% loss

While a camera isn't a security one would expect it to hold more of it's value if it really
has unbeatable qualities.

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FredBGG

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Re: The future of medium format
« Reply #179 on: December 20, 2012, 03:33:27 am »

Hi Fred,

I see what you mean. On the other hand, BC has a point that small companies do some thinking out of the box and try to make stuff outside the main stream. I would say that many belowed products belong there. The Fuji 68 (a camera I admire), Mamiya RZ67 and also Contax 645 and the Hy6. In the end I ended up with a Pentax 67 and Minolta/Sony stuff.

For my part I'm pretty mch interested in both technology, physics and photography. But I see myself as an engineer having photography as his hobby, not an artist.

Best regards
Erik


Actually I don't think that the small companies are thinking out side the box.

Lets look at the cameras you listed.

Fuji 68 (I assume you mean the Fuji gx680). Well it's not designed, made or sold by a small company. Fuji is a qiant company.
Mamiya RZ comes from what is now a small company in difficulty, but it was designed 30 years or so ago when Mamiya was in full bloom.
Just look at the massive quantity of this camera for sale used today. Great camera ... I had several.
Contax 645 made and designed by Yashica Kyochera with lenses by Carl Zeiss. Both huge companies.
Pentax 67 made and designed by Pentax that was a large company at the time and is today part of Ricoh ($8.47 billion market Cap)
with the medical part of Pentax going to Hoya ($ 8.4 billion)


I think it is safe to say that Phase, Leaf and Hasselblad don't really think outside the box.
Rather that they are working within the constraints of their roots and the cameras they got started with.
Scanning companies merging with MF camera companies. 30 years later still pretty much making removable back
cameras.

On the other hand the big 4 other companies have made significant revolutionary changes
and at a fraction of the cost while matching the quality of MF offering 4/5 times the price.

They have also come up with all sorts of different camera types with a huge range of choices.
Look at all the far from mainstream cameras coming from Fuji, Canon, Sony and Nikon.

 
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