Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/03/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]OK boys and girls, PMA was just a little shrunken from years past. Two years ago the trade floor took up two floors in Las Vegas. This year they took up a larg part of one floor, of course they threw in a touchy feely designer model store, and lots of large open spots to sit down and enjoy the lack of exhibitors. Film stuff: Fuji announce two slide films, a new Provia 400X I think and a new 64T. Both much more than new and improved Tide. They had a number of very well done very large prints around demonstrating detail, color, sharpness, gradation, and a certain luminosity because it was largely shot on film. Fuji's chairman in a keynote speech talked specifically how Fuji was committing large sums of R&D into the film business and how important the print was to the individuals involved as well as the industry. Epson showed the V700 which is a flat bed scanner capable of 6400dpi optically on a scan bed covering 8X10. Film holders would include 35mm through 8X10. Price point was $549. Silverfast is the interface software. At a $799 price point you also recieved a better software package and an adapter to scan in a wet mount. Hasselblad was off in a small room showing off their good stuff to people who could write checks so I can not report on the Zeiss offerings. Now that I have bored 80% of the list, the other important things at the show included some pretty intense wars in the RAW converter business. Bibble was showing their latest which had very good noise reduction that could be targeted at just that level of shadows where you found objectionable noise without a significant loss of detail. Apple was all over Aperture which seemed more of a work flow aid. Adobe must feel some heat as they spent a lot of time talking about their competing product, Lightroom, which can be downloaded as a beta from their site(Mac only at this point) Nik has improved their filter suite so that it is easier, faster, and more connected so that you can do some pretty amazing things really fast. They also have a new plug in for Nikon View? that will do some amazing things in NEF. There is some very smart programming going on with seamless ability to wash parts of the scene lighter or darker more or less contrast, color casts in selected portions of an image. Global corrections at the RAW stage are now becoming localised adjustments. Hopefully this will leave Beta soon. HP has seen the Epson light and was showing a very promising wide carraige pigment ink printer that would have archival results on a wide variety of third party papers. Individual ink carts so you no longer spend money on wasted ink. B.D. take heart, the prints on a large number of paper surfaces looked very good. Canon was doing the same, but the color gamut was not as large and color looked good, but was not accurate according to some very knowledgeable people I know that might have a horse in the Epson ring. Interesting advance for Epson printers, a small English company, Innova was showing an inkjet paper that looked exactly like Illford Gallerie glossy air dried. Great feel, wonderful deep dark Dmax, fabulous feel of depth. At the same booth was a bookbinder www.booksmartstudio.com that not only had workshops but could also be hired to bind some prety wonderful books at a very reasonable cost. B.D needed something exactly like this for his west coast wedding. Hannemuhle also showed a wonderful paper that looked as good as the above. I think that inkjeters just moved into the mainstream and out of the artsy world. No more excuses that you like the fuzzy look of 100% rag paper. You would have to see the black blacks and smooth gradation to real looking whites. Depth to the image that in the past only came from wet work. Serious users might look at the new line of monitors from Eizo Nanao. 16:9 format to keep the pesky tools on screen, wide range of individual color adjustment as well as the lux, color temperature, and gamma. Gamma actually set at the factory so neutral is neutral. The extra color adjustments mean that when you calibrate you monitor on the advanced settings you can dial in exact color at a variety of midpoints, not just 0, 128, and 255. Likewise, Wacom was showing off some new tablets, Intuos, with keys and sliders on the sides that you can program. Want a quicker way to adjust brush size than the brackets? Use the slide keys that allow rapid or precise changes. Now on topic, the kind friends at the Leica booth were very gratified about the high volume of visitors that were not just lens kickers. Also, they seemed pretty sure that the dM would hit around Photokina. They did do some exploration at the price points but the previous numbers seemed in the right range. As far as P&S cameras, everybody had more pixels(8 being pretty common under $500), bigger screens(2.5" very common), image stabilisation on most models over $300, and higher ISO's available. Fuji was the most aggressive on the ISO front with some pretty convincing displays showing useable 1600. Sizes have generally come up from the SonyT7 which might have been too small. SLR's were pretty quiet although one of the keynote speakers was wondering when his D200 would ever come. There was some genuine interest in the new Olympus with continuous viewing. Comments from dealers indicated they liked the upgrade path from P&S and also the margins they could make. Canon of course was packed all the time with people looking at the toys. Nikon had a full house, but never got to the zoo stage. Nikon's new 105 Micro was very nice and the image stabilization will make some interesting changes in how macro gets done. Nikon also showed a very cool ring light set up where you could add up to 4 small flashes on any part of a ring that mounted on a lens. Weight your light, no problem. Want to imitate the big boys with fashion ring lights, easy as taking out the old check book. TTL easy, you bet. Tina, Canon's new 85 F1.2 will make you mad you bought the old one. Much faster AF and a very nice manual focus throw as well. More as I get sleep. Don don.dory@gmail.com