Can't wait for the 5DII price to drop. The 5DII's center point is great. I totally understand how most shooters need a new AF system in the 5D3, but a $1200 5DII is going to be a better value for me than a $3500 5D3.
When i moved from using a 40d to a 5d2 i seen a vast difference in the quality of my photographs but i take this as a given that i started to use a 24-70 f2.8 lens. The megapixel count nearly doubled and so did my file size. Now i am thinking apart from a few better focusing points and a second memory card will i be taking as big a step like i did from the 40d to the 5d2 travelling onto the new 5d3?
Kind regards
Patrick.
I just really hope new features from the 1Dx will be on the new 5D, like the rating system. For those of us shooting news on a deadline, it would REALLY help...
Jim, this is a feature you've mentioned quite a few times, but I"m still unclear exactly what it does. I know when I need to "rate" images, I just use the lock feature to tag the ones I know I want, and then only upload those to the computer later. Granted, this is menu driven and not necessarily something I can do *while* shooting, but if I'm reviewing through a card of images it can be useful.
Just curious
ETA:
Can't wait for the 5DII price to drop. The 5DII's center point is great. I totally understand how most shooters need a new AF system in the 5D3, but a $1200 5DII is going to be a better value for me than a $3500 5D3.
I know that I will want what the 5d3 looks set to offer, but I also know I'm not going to have that kind of money in the next couple of months unless I get a slew of bookings (and if I do, I am ALL OVER IT lol).
If life is more realistically what I expect, though, I'm considering doing what I did on the path to the 7d, which was to find a well-priced 50d while I built up some more savings, and then jump to the 7d about a year after it was released and the price had come down a little bit. If I grabbed a good copy of the 5d2 as people throw them overboard to upgrade, that might be a decent way forward ~muses~
When i moved from using a 40d to a 5d2 i seen a vast difference in the quality of my photographs but i take this as a given that i started to use a 24-70 f2.8 lens. The megapixel count nearly doubled and so did my file size. Now i am thinking apart from a few better focusing points and a second memory card will i be taking as big a step like i did from the 40d to the 5d2 travelling onto the new 5d3?
Kind regards
Patrick.
The short answer to the question is, if you have to ask, it's not the camera for you. The "big step" will be in the focus system, and video quality / functions. I bet there will be a minimal increase in dynamic range and ISO performance, not nearly enough to be the sole reason for an upgrade considering how the 5D mk2 already delivers amazing images in low light. If they're in focus. ;-)
Jim, this is a feature you've mentioned quite a few times, but I"m still unclear exactly what it does. I know when I need to "rate" images, I just use the lock feature to tag the ones I know I want, and then only upload those to the computer later. Granted, this is menu driven and not necessarily something I can do *while* shooting, but if I'm reviewing through a card of images it can be useful....
I'm assuming that this will simply be a star-raking system that is readable in the metadata for programs like Lightroom etc. This will be extremely helpful for event shooters and other pros who click high volumes of images in short periods and need to remember which image in a set of 10+ is the "keeper" or whatever.
I'm looking forward to this one, I got a 7D a while back and love it, but really been wanting the 5D2 for more landscape stuff but been holding back for this new 5D3....I'm just super excited about this!!
I'm looking forward to this one, I got a 7D a while back and love it, but really been wanting the 5D2 for more landscape stuff but been holding back for this new 5D3....I'm just super excited about this!!
Joe
Mind sharing your thoughts on 7d for landscape photography? Im trying to decide which way to go from my 50d.
Thanks
I have the 5dm2 and have used the 7d. For landscape work they are both capable cameras, but all other things equal (i.e. glass, stability, etc) the 5dm2 is going to have much cleaner final images.
Depending upon your final use you may or may not notice the difference without pixel peeping, but blown up large enough the difference is obvious.
Bringing the discussion back on topic, I am not sure how much the new 5dm3 will actually have for landscape/studio type shooting over the current model.
The short answer to the question is, if you have to ask, it's not the camera for you. The "big step" will be in the focus system, and video quality / functions. I bet there will be a minimal increase in dynamic range and ISO performance, not nearly enough to be the sole reason for an upgrade considering how the 5D mk2 already delivers amazing images in low light. If they're in focus. ;-)
=Matt=
Hi Matt
Thankyou for your help. The focus issue is somthing that needs to be sorted out especially in low light as my trash bin is full. I have noticed a difference in quality between the screen on my 5d2 and what i end up with in camera raw but that is an issue that was beaten to death. The video quality is superb. How many people have a proper hd tv is the answer to that and i endup having to put all of my hd 25fps through a converter anyway to edit them, but i always keep the original footage just incase i upgrade my laptop for future use. I had to ask because the jump that i require would not justfy just a few issues that can be overcome with manual focus and a video system that just needs a rolling focus too. My father once said to me that there is a golden rule that you have to abide by and that is one tool one job.
If you to buy a pound of steak you would not ask a tailor. Granted that the 5d2 can do its job well, the amount of extras you need along with the knowelege to adjust your camera for different scenes is not worth the hassle unless for home videos is a given to throw it into P (Professional lo) mode.
I am looking forward to the reviews whenever they come out but judging from what you have wrote here, for me at least, the camera would have to come closer to the flagship to justify the jump.
Kind regards
Patrick.
0
Matthew SavilleRegistered Users, Retired ModPosts: 3,352Major grins
Joe
Mind sharing your thoughts on 7d for landscape photography? Im trying to decide which way to go from my 50d.
Thanks
The 7D is the better camera if weight and size are your concern, if you need the versatility. With a 7D you have many awesome third-party options for ultra-wide, like the Tokina 11-16 2.8 and the Sigma 10-20, or of course the SUPER SHARP 10-22 EF-S... On the 5D mk2, you're really just stuck between the 16-35 mk2 and the 17-40 L, nothing else really resolves corners well enough to defeat the 7D. (Although Tokina has been coming out with a few new full-frame ultrawides...)
Also, the 7D affords you a much better telephopto camera for wildlife and any other kind of shooting where reach is important. Overall it's just a more versatile camera, if versatility is more important to you than sheer image quality. And even then, the 7D delivers AMAZING image quality if you expose it right.
Personally i'd go with the 7D any day, because that's the type of shooting I do. But many hardcore landscape shooters (with more money to burn) go with the 5D mk2 and I'm sure they're very happy.
HEY-OOOO!!! They've gone and done the impossible. Congratulations, Canon / Canon shooters! Welcome to the "affordable flagship AF" party! ivar
=Matt=
Yeah it will be a sweet camera. I'm not sure $3500 counts as "affordable", but I guess it is compared to $6800. I'm still hoping for $2700. $3500 seems a little unfair unless it is a quantum leap over the Nikon D700, and not just in resolution.
Anyway my 7D is on the block now, 5DII will be whenever the III hits the stores.
The 7D is the better camera if weight and size are your concern, if you need the versatility.
The difference in size and weight between the 7D and 5DII is insignificant. Actually I can't tell a difference holding them in my hands, I'd have to look it up.
With a 7D you have many awesome third-party options for ultra-wide, like the Tokina 11-16 2.8 and the Sigma 10-20, or of course the SUPER SHARP 10-22 EF-S... On the 5D mk2, you're really just stuck between the 16-35 mk2 and the 17-40 L, nothing else really resolves corners well enough to defeat the 7D. (Although Tokina has been coming out with a few new full-frame ultrawides...)
I had a Sigma 10-20. I didn't think it was awesome. The colors were just off. By itself it's a fine lens but compared to the rest of my Canon lenses I just couldn't get past the difference in color. Also I wouldn't call it super sharp, and the 10-22 isn't any sharper.
I love the 17-40L on my 5DII.
Also, the 7D affords you a much better telephopto camera for wildlife and any other kind of shooting where reach is important. Overall it's just a more versatile camera, if versatility is more important to you than sheer image quality. And even then, the 7D delivers AMAZING image quality if you expose it right.
Personally i'd go with the 7D any day, because that's the type of shooting I do. But many hardcore landscape shooters (with more money to burn) go with the 5D mk2 and I'm sure they're very happy.
=Matt=
The 7D wins when you are focal length limited, of course. But if you really enjoy pixel peeping and/or you print very large, the 5DII wins. Also if you want to get into tilt-shift lenses, you don't have a choice.
-Jack
An "accurate" reproduction of a scene and a good photograph are often two different things.
The difference in size and weight between the 7D and 5DII is insignificant. Actually I can't tell a difference holding them in my hands, I'd have to look it up.
The 7D wins when you are focal length limited, of course. But if you really enjoy pixel peeping and/or you print very large, the 5DII wins. Also if you want to get into tilt-shift lenses, you don't have a choice.
+1
.. or a fish-eye, for that matter ;-)
All in all 7D is a great camera for a price. It has "reach". It has a large lineup of relatively inexpensive EF-S glass, both from Canon and from 3d parties (Sigma, Tamron). It has fast fps rate that also makes it a decent choice for any dynamic actions. I like its other niceties, e.g. a built-in level, etc.
I'm sure 99.95% of the customers would never be able to tell which print came from which camera. Heck, I printed and sold 20"x30" canvasses from 20D/30D, to which 7D is vastly superior.
But speaking of the ultimate image quality side by side: 5DmkII combined with EF/L glass is superior to 7D + EF-S combination, especially so in low light/high ISO conditions.
Unfortunately, like many good things in life, this quality comes at a price, no doubt about it.
Unsurpassed Image Quality
22.3 Megapixel Full Frame CMOS sensor
DiG!C 5+ Image Processor
ISO 100-25600 (expandable to L:50 H1:51200, H2: 102400
Full HD Movie (ISO 100-12800 (H:25600)
High Performance Operation
61-point high-density reticular AF (up to 41 crosstype points)
6.0 fps for high continuous shooting
Intelligent viewfinder with approx. 100% coverage
3.2-type, approx.1.04m dot (3:2 wide) Clear View LCD II
iFCL metering with 63-zone dual-layer sensor
Shutter durability of 150,000 cycles
High end features
Silent & low vibration modes
Dual card slots (CF & SD)
High Dynamic Range (HDR) Mode
Multiple Exposures
Comparative Playback function
Improved durability & water and dust resistance
SPECIFICATIONS
Available Colours – Black
Megapixels – 22MP
Sensor Size – 36 x 24mm
ISO/Sensitivity – 100 – 25600
Autofocus Points – 61 points
Lens Mount – Canon
LCD Size – 3.2″
Liveview – Yes
Viewfinder – Optical TTL
Min Shutter Speed – 30 sec
Max Shutter Speed – 1/8000 sec
Continuous Shooting Speed – 6 fps
Self Timer – 10 sec, 2 sec
Metering – Centre-weighted, Spot, Evaluative, Partial
Video Resolution – Full HD 1080
Memory Type – Compact Flash
Connectivity – USB 2, HDMI, Mic Input, Wireless (optional)
Battery – LP-E6
Battery Type – Lithium-ion
Charger – Includes Li-Ion Charger
File Formats – AVI, RAW, H.264, MOV, MPEG-4
Dimensions – 152 x 116 x 76mm
Box Contents – Battery Pack LP-E6 .. Battery Charger LC-E6 .. AV Cable AVC-DC400ST .. Interface Cable IFC-200U .. Eyecup Eg .. Wide Strap EWEOS5DMKIII .. CR1616 Lithium Battery+
Nikon D800, Pentax K1000
You don't take a photograph, you make it. ~Ansel Adams
The announced Canon 5D II is a total piece of crap. The only people buying these will be the Canon fan boys....and girls.
Good grief people look at this with some objectivity. Nikon has a 36MP camera for under 3k. Nokia has a cell phone, yes a cell phone with 41MP. What do we get? A measly antiquated 22MP. :cry
There is a camera that lets you choose the focus after you take the shot. Does Canon....noooooo. You have to buy fancy expensive lenses and practice until the cows (the same cows you may not be able to photograph any more) come home.
What if you drop it in a little water? Toast. Whats up with that? The darn thing is using a mirror system from the late forties. We don't need no stinking mirror flapping around. The darn thing won't even have a built in flash. Ya gota buy more stuff.
They rely on some type of battery system prone to exploding. They only come in one color, black. What is wrong with those Canon people? Don't they know there are a lot of woman who are becoming fantastic photographers? It doesn't hurt to be color coordinated while taking those great images.
And don't even get me started on that Dx 1 thing that costs 136 times more than my first car!
The announced Canon 5D II is a total piece of crap. The only people buying these will be the Canon fan boys....and girls.
Good grief people look at this with some objectivity. Nikon has a 36MP camera for under 3k. Nokia has a cell phone, yes a cell phone with 41MP. What do we get? A measly antiquated 22MP. :cry
There is a camera that lets you choose the focus after you take the shot. Does Canon....noooooo. You have to buy fancy expensive lenses and practice until the cows (the same cows you may not be able to photograph any more) come home.
What if you drop it in a little water? Toast. Whats up with that? The darn thing is using a mirror system from the late forties. We don't need no stinking mirror flapping around. The darn thing won't even have a built in flash. Ya gota buy more stuff.
They rely on some type of battery system prone to exploding. They only come in one color, black. What is wrong with those Canon people? Don't they know there are a lot of woman who are becoming fantastic photographers? It doesn't hurt to be color coordinated while taking those great images.
And don't even get me started on that Dx 1 thing that costs 136 times more than my first car!
Hey, Andy, I called Tallyn's this afternoon and they confirmed you were number one. That's great for you and bad for me. : How about I let you use my personal North American network of underground mag-lev tunnel shuttles that connect most all the national parks in the western half of the US and Canada - in exchange for the rights to your first-in-line 5DIII?
My Smugmug
"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne Gretzky
Comments
Kind regards
Patrick.
Just curious
ETA:
I know that I will want what the 5d3 looks set to offer, but I also know I'm not going to have that kind of money in the next couple of months unless I get a slew of bookings (and if I do, I am ALL OVER IT lol).
If life is more realistically what I expect, though, I'm considering doing what I did on the path to the 7d, which was to find a well-priced 50d while I built up some more savings, and then jump to the 7d about a year after it was released and the price had come down a little bit. If I grabbed a good copy of the 5d2 as people throw them overboard to upgrade, that might be a decent way forward ~muses~
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
I'm assuming that this will simply be a star-raking system that is readable in the metadata for programs like Lightroom etc. This will be extremely helpful for event shooters and other pros who click high volumes of images in short periods and need to remember which image in a set of 10+ is the "keeper" or whatever.
Not at all a critical feature, but indeed useful.
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
Maybe March 4th will....
I'm looking forward to this one, I got a 7D a while back and love it, but really been wanting the 5D2 for more landscape stuff but been holding back for this new 5D3....I'm just super excited about this!!
My Smugmug Site
Joe
Mind sharing your thoughts on 7d for landscape photography? Im trying to decide which way to go from my 50d.
Thanks
My site | Non-MHD Landscapes |Google+ | Twitter | Facebook | Smugmug photos
Depending upon your final use you may or may not notice the difference without pixel peeping, but blown up large enough the difference is obvious.
Bringing the discussion back on topic, I am not sure how much the new 5dm3 will actually have for landscape/studio type shooting over the current model.
Hi Matt
Thankyou for your help. The focus issue is somthing that needs to be sorted out especially in low light as my trash bin is full. I have noticed a difference in quality between the screen on my 5d2 and what i end up with in camera raw but that is an issue that was beaten to death. The video quality is superb. How many people have a proper hd tv is the answer to that and i endup having to put all of my hd 25fps through a converter anyway to edit them, but i always keep the original footage just incase i upgrade my laptop for future use. I had to ask because the jump that i require would not justfy just a few issues that can be overcome with manual focus and a video system that just needs a rolling focus too. My father once said to me that there is a golden rule that you have to abide by and that is one tool one job.
If you to buy a pound of steak you would not ask a tailor. Granted that the 5d2 can do its job well, the amount of extras you need along with the knowelege to adjust your camera for different scenes is not worth the hassle unless for home videos is a given to throw it into P (Professional lo) mode.
I am looking forward to the reviews whenever they come out but judging from what you have wrote here, for me at least, the camera would have to come closer to the flagship to justify the jump.
Kind regards
Patrick.
The 7D is the better camera if weight and size are your concern, if you need the versatility. With a 7D you have many awesome third-party options for ultra-wide, like the Tokina 11-16 2.8 and the Sigma 10-20, or of course the SUPER SHARP 10-22 EF-S... On the 5D mk2, you're really just stuck between the 16-35 mk2 and the 17-40 L, nothing else really resolves corners well enough to defeat the 7D. (Although Tokina has been coming out with a few new full-frame ultrawides...)
Also, the 7D affords you a much better telephopto camera for wildlife and any other kind of shooting where reach is important. Overall it's just a more versatile camera, if versatility is more important to you than sheer image quality. And even then, the 7D delivers AMAZING image quality if you expose it right.
Personally i'd go with the 7D any day, because that's the type of shooting I do. But many hardcore landscape shooters (with more money to burn) go with the 5D mk2 and I'm sure they're very happy.
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
Yeah it will be a sweet camera. I'm not sure $3500 counts as "affordable", but I guess it is compared to $6800. I'm still hoping for $2700. $3500 seems a little unfair unless it is a quantum leap over the Nikon D700, and not just in resolution.
Anyway my 7D is on the block now, 5DII will be whenever the III hits the stores.
canonrumors.com has ranged from 6 to 7.5.
An "accurate" reproduction of a scene and a good photograph are often two different things.
Here is a quick landscape test I did between my 5DII and 7D:
http://www.jmphotocraft.com/5DII_v_7D/shore.htm
The difference in size and weight between the 7D and 5DII is insignificant. Actually I can't tell a difference holding them in my hands, I'd have to look it up.
I had a Sigma 10-20. I didn't think it was awesome. The colors were just off. By itself it's a fine lens but compared to the rest of my Canon lenses I just couldn't get past the difference in color. Also I wouldn't call it super sharp, and the 10-22 isn't any sharper.
I love the 17-40L on my 5DII.
The 7D wins when you are focal length limited, of course. But if you really enjoy pixel peeping and/or you print very large, the 5DII wins. Also if you want to get into tilt-shift lenses, you don't have a choice.
An "accurate" reproduction of a scene and a good photograph are often two different things.
http://photorumors.com/2012/02/27/more-leaked-images-of-the-canon-eos-5d-mark-iii-camera/
You don't take a photograph, you make it. ~Ansel Adams
Blue Moon Originals
+1
I don't feel it either: the weight difference is 10 grams. And, FWIW, 5D2 is *lighter* ;-)
http://www.dpreview.com/products/compare/side-by-side?products=canon_eos7d&products=canon_eos5dmkii
+1
EF 16-35MkII leaves it in the dust.
+1
.. or a fish-eye, for that matter ;-)
All in all 7D is a great camera for a price. It has "reach". It has a large lineup of relatively inexpensive EF-S glass, both from Canon and from 3d parties (Sigma, Tamron). It has fast fps rate that also makes it a decent choice for any dynamic actions. I like its other niceties, e.g. a built-in level, etc.
I'm sure 99.95% of the customers would never be able to tell which print came from which camera. Heck, I printed and sold 20"x30" canvasses from 20D/30D, to which 7D is vastly superior.
But speaking of the ultimate image quality side by side: 5DmkII combined with EF/L glass is superior to 7D + EF-S combination, especially so in low light/high ISO conditions.
Unfortunately, like many good things in life, this quality comes at a price, no doubt about it.
You don't take a photograph, you make it. ~Ansel Adams
Blue Moon Originals
I'm getting the first two units that Tallyn's gets, one for me and one to GIVE AWAY from SmugMug
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Thanks Andy. I'll take the "give away" one off your hands.
http://bgarland.smugmug.com/
Good grief people look at this with some objectivity. Nikon has a 36MP camera for under 3k. Nokia has a cell phone, yes a cell phone with 41MP. What do we get? A measly antiquated 22MP. :cry
There is a camera that lets you choose the focus after you take the shot. Does Canon....noooooo. You have to buy fancy expensive lenses and practice until the cows (the same cows you may not be able to photograph any more) come home.
What if you drop it in a little water? Toast. Whats up with that? The darn thing is using a mirror system from the late forties. We don't need no stinking mirror flapping around. The darn thing won't even have a built in flash. Ya gota buy more stuff.
They rely on some type of battery system prone to exploding. They only come in one color, black. What is wrong with those Canon people? Don't they know there are a lot of woman who are becoming fantastic photographers? It doesn't hurt to be color coordinated while taking those great images.
And don't even get me started on that Dx 1 thing that costs 136 times more than my first car!
Sam
Choose me!!! Choose me!!!
I'll be eagerly awaiting that give away... gotta start the good luck rituals now!
Pick me! Pick me!
"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne Gretzky
If you think that, well, then you should buy a 5D mk2! They'll be pretty cheap!
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum