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Showing results 1 to 9 of 9 Search: Liked Posts
Forum: Pentax K-5 & K-5 II 11-29-2010, 09:24 PM  
K-5 or d7000 ?
Posted By Eruditass
Replies: 78
Views: 21,396
User care will have significantly more impact on the lifespan of a DSLR. Get that dust out of your camera and store it in a dry environment.

I'd like to remind everyone to look at my signature and post their camera in the database.
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 11-15-2010, 12:01 PM  
Filters too expensive?
Posted By imtheguy
Replies: 38
Views: 5,721
You are welcome. If you have any questions for them, shoot an email to Yolanda <yolanda@hvstar.com> for a quick response....hopefully she is still there.
Forum: Pentax K-r 10-13-2010, 09:16 AM  
The Pentax K-r has arrived!!!
Posted By creampuff
Replies: 263
Views: 126,456
Happy to announce the new Pentax K-r and K-5 has already arrived in Singapore! So over dinner with my good friend and resident Pentax guru frank we had the opportunity to test the new Pentax K-r (the K-5 test will come later). Yeah it's in pink!!!



If you think the K-x was good, the new K-r is simply amazing. AF is really fast and locks positively without hesitation. I would say it betters the K-7 and K-x, and I have been told the K-5 is even better still. Live View is a breeze to use and fast, dare I say a notch better than the K-7. When set at Continuous Shooting (Hi), you'll get approximately six images per second and every one of the exposures were sharp and spot on. Anyone having doubts about the camera not being suitable for action shooting should work on their technique because the camera is plenty fast and accurate.



Thumbing though the different ISO settings, the images are simply astounding. Doubts about shooting at high ISO, having to invest in FF or other brands can be laid to rest because the images are jaw droppingly stunning. Available light shooting without flash is just dead easy. I'm waiting for my buddy frank to post more images and give his input on the K-r. I'm also looking forward to his Pentax 35mm lens match-up that he's preparing.



Bottomline is the K-r is a quantum leap ahead in image quality. Junk your existing cameras and upgrade. As a former K-7 user, I'll honestly say there is no reason to keep it any longer because it has just been outclassed where it counts - image quality. So here's some quick and dirty images from the new Pentax K-r. Test images shot handheld in RAW, opened in Adobe Camera Raw, resized with no sharpening or post processing or noise reduction. Camera's default High-ISO NR set to Auto. Lens used was the DA 35mm f/2.8 Macro Limited. Available light from the coffeeshop (mix of fluorescent and incandescent ambient lighting). Photos of the K-r taken with the Lumix LX-3. Image exifs are intact.
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 10-01-2010, 10:21 AM  
24-70mm Options
Posted By qdoan
Replies: 18
Views: 4,235
There is one other major difference between the HSM and the non-HSM version... and that would be the IF, Internal Focusing..and the size. It weighs the same as the non-HSM, but is only 3.5in long, where as the non-HSM is 5" not extended and is 6+" fully extended.

This would be benefical and make life easier if you're shooting with polarizers or graduated filters..

Then question is.. how much is quietness/HSM, size and internal focusing worth to you? as it is an extra 4-500 bucks for those features.
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 09-30-2010, 03:11 PM  
24-70mm Options
Posted By Rude
Replies: 18
Views: 4,235
Purchased this lens used on eBay recently. If you look around and are patient, you can get a good deal (I've seen them at $350 used from dealers like KEH).

After a lot of research, seems like many prefer the Sigma 24-60 because it can be found extremely cheap (like $200 used from places like B&H or KEH when they come up used). Also, as others have mentioned, they are 77mm and much smaller/lighter than the 24-70.

The 24-70 is a beast. It's huge, and heavy. But I already had the Sigma 15-30 EX lens, which is virtually the same size/weight, so I can share filters.

Aside from the size/weight, I find it an excellent lens, extremely good focal length for shooting candids and portraits. Even though mine isn't the HSM version, image quality is great . . .
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 09-30-2010, 08:42 AM  
24-70mm Options
Posted By Lowell Goudge
Replies: 18
Views: 4,235
there generally is a sigma non HSM of some form or another in the market place all the time in the $600 range

as to the difference in noise, I can't say, I don't own any HSM lenses and unless I brake something I can;t see replacing any of my zooms just for HSM. Maybe perhaps more speed in the new sigma 10-20 but even that is a pretty hard sell, conisdering I am please with what I have
Forum: Photographic Technique 09-24-2010, 12:26 AM  
Why is nature photography so boring?
Posted By bkpix
Replies: 227
Views: 50,349
The late David Joyce, an excellent and inventive photographer and artist in Oregon, used to have a cartoon taped to the door of his office. Titled Nature Photographer, it showed a guy with a big view camera and tripod, his head under the dark cloth. He was carefully focusing on the scene in front of him, which consisted entirely of an Ansel Adams calendar propped up on a chair.

This, sadly, is the state of most nature photography today, especially in the United States. Photographers of this school don’t actually photograph the world around them, even when they trek halfway around the globe to do so. Instead they photograph what a few bright minds have seen for them – this, and no more. When they travel to Yosemite they see Ansel Adams’ Yosemite. When they encounter a Sandhill Crane they see Arthur Morris’ version of a Sandhill Crane. When they look at fall leaves they see fall leaves according to John Shaw.

These photographers – who are often earnest and hard working and willing to spend a lot of money in this pursuit – buy books to tell them what pictures to take. They sign up for expensive seminars from famous photographers who show them what kind of lens and what kind of film to use to capture the world in just the same way as the famous photographer once did. They go online and trade advice about lens tests and film resolution and motor drive speeds, but rarely discuss anything beyond simple photographic technique – this f-stop, that exposure index. And then they sell pictures to magazines.

If they do discuss images, their criticism usually follows a seldom stated but unyielding set of rules, which say the photograph must be sharp, clear, classically composed and representational – basically, following the tenets established by the Photosecession movement a century ago. The irony, of course, is that the Photosecession was a revolt against the Pictorialist aesthetic then in vogue. Now, though, its vision represents a kind of 19th century French Academy, guarding the portals of photography against innovation.

You can sell a nature photograph to most magazine editors today only so long as it looks a lot like every other nature photograph published in the last 25 years. Any especially original photograph will be rejected — not, supposedly, because it’s original, but always because it’s too grainy, or too dark, or oddly composed, or otherwise violates the implicit rules of the game.

This kind of conservatism starts when you’re learning technique, and so beginners are often the most enthusiastic about enforcing its rules. It’s natural, while learning any skill, to seek to imitate past masters. Painters go to museums and paint copies of masterpieces. Good writers often memorize interesting passages of writing.

Photographers should emulate masterpieces, too. My complaint is that photographers, as a group, too frequently fail to move beyond this apprenticeship into mastery of their own. By setting their tripods in the footprints of masters, they limit themselves to a kind of visual stenography.

Obsession with technique and, especially, with technical rules is terribly prevalent in photography compared to other visual arts. (When photographers get together, they talk about lens tests. When painters get together, they talk about money.) For some photographers, indeed, photography is almost entirely about technique. While practicing technique can be a satisfying pastime, it rarely produces interesting art.

Today’s wildlife photography has a strong emphasis on producing clean, sharp images of healthy, charismatic animals shot on grainless film (now, noiseless digital files) with dramatic “golden hour” lighting. These certainly make marketable images in the contemporary market. But nature is bigger than this narrow representation. Animals, even more than humans, go through their lives injured and deformed. Few wild animals live in pristine wilderness areas; rather more of them contend with traffic on interstate highways on a daily basis than live in Eden.

Nature happens at noon, not just at sunrise and sunset. I’d love to see more nature photography that actually reflects the world outside, and not just the world according to nature calendars.

(I wrote this a few years ago on my blog, Bob Keefer Photography | Pictures of the American Northwest, and posted it here in a slightly updated form as I think it still applies.)
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 09-23-2010, 07:01 PM  
Lens Questions
Posted By JonPB
Replies: 23
Views: 4,015
Just to point out: going with primes will actually be lighter, and considerably so.

The collection of Sigmas you mention will weigh 2680g. If you stick with Pentax, get a 12-24, DA 35 macro, 50-135, and 200, and you're at 2155g. If you go entirely with primes--15, 21, 40, 70, 135 (I calculate the SMC-F version, which is heavier than FA), and 200--you're at 1792g, mostly in the long lenses.

Honestly, though, I think you should look at your own photography and see what ranges you need most. I know very few people who frequently use focal lengths from very wide to telephoto. You also should consider your approach to photography: will these mostly be snapshots, or will you take time to compose images? Snapshots favor zooms with the widest range you can tolerate the quality of; the time required to consider composition makes the time required to change lenses negligible, and primes remain higher quality than zooms, which leans toward a collection of primes.

My guess is that you'd be happy--photographically, not necessarily as an owner--with mid-range zoom lenses and a few excellent primes. It would be lighter and cheaper, but have the quality when you need it.
Forum: Pentax DSLR Discussion 09-16-2010, 02:35 AM  
Its my way or the highway
Posted By Steelski
Replies: 50
Views: 13,752
This is about the Nikon/Canon/Pentax jumping ship at the sight of a body people.

Dear fellow Pentaxians.
I am a working professional photographer that lives in a country called Bulgaria. I have my own strobe studio that I use for portraiture, I shoot weddings, parties and other events. I am waiting for my big break into serious work (yes I do not consider weddings to be what I want to be doing). Above all these things I became a professional photographer because I really love doing it for myself.
I have a self taught background and really loved processing my own B&W work. It was a real pleasure!!!!!
Now I earn the equivalent of $250 dollars per wedding......and I am expensive here!!!!
Despite all the limitations of my equipment, I am able to pull of good results... better than those with full frame Nikons and Canons around me. They pride themselves on equipment and often sneer at mine.
I am under no illusion that If I were to use a more professional tool than my K20D and K10D combo I would get better results! But I can not afford two systems. You see, I am besotted with the Joy of photography. I love to take pictures!!!! Not so much process them. I know I get that from my Pentax K20D.
Its really sad that a lot of people are so struck by the specs and price of the D7000. The K-7 is described by all of its owners with words more akin to a friend than a tool.

I recently saw the DPREVIEW description of the K-7 against the D7000.
"The Pentax K7, which has slipped into the D7000's class by virtue of its current asking price, combines handling qualities of both the D7000 and the two Canons, and is arguably one of the most pleasant DSLRs of its type to hold and use."
The key word is also the last one. "USE"

I read a couple of comment that Nikon has won this round, or has beaten Pentax.
Nonsense. If you think that then you are really need to look again.
Technically they are like twins.
I see nothing to sway anyone one way or the other....
"but what about AF" I hear some scream.
You mean the dumbed down D300 array with 9 cross points, all of which smaller and clustered towards the middle. I think many need to check what the comments were when Nikon abandoned its very similar to Pentax array in the D2x.
AF was near identical with a better performance in some situations for the new D300 and some for the D2x.
http://www.luminescentphoto.com/articles/CAM2000/CAM2000-Sensor-Placement.gif
We have a rather untested Safox IX+ that people are already dismissing. Its already second gen after the 645D and is said to be much faster by the few sources we have...... So lets wait and see.

Forgive me for straying but I thought I would answer that question before it was asked.

Now, the Joy of shooting. As I said before , I cling to my Pentax equipment because it gives me joy, I have shot a few other cameras that simply did not feel so right in the hand, and certainly did not give me pleasure (including a Nikon D700 and D80, Canon rebels and 40D). I have also used Pentax cameras that do the same..... the PZ-1p being a performance revaluation when I got it back in the day, but it did not feel great to use.

What strikes me is that I am willing to wait for something that I know I will like to use, and a big bunch of you are just ready to jump.
Go ahead, you are clearly just tech junkies, and for something that is likley to be a very marginal difference and a few more dollars at launch.
Go ahead and buy the Nikon primes you want. The 35mm 1.4 is nice. So is the 24 1.4 and 85 1.4.
I sit hear dreaming that I got the FA Limiteds trio before the price hike, but they are still cheaper than the Nikons.
What I am saying is that a lot of you clearly do not value the actual use of your equipment. You are very willing to give up on something that very few companies actually offer, and thats user satisfaction. I know the K-7 was not up to scratch at High ISO, and the focus was still slow at low light, I also know that the flash system needs development, as do some the lenses. Now that the camera aspect seems to have been addressed, what?.... the feeling of the way Pentax do things is gone? The K-7 which was designed like a glove is comparable to the D90 with a few more buttons? Save some money, buy your high performance Nikon and good riddance to you (although technically I think Pentax is actually a step above in some aspects)
I value the joy of photographing something. You value what???? IQ, speed, accuracy, focus point, VR, branding. If you find the D7000 gives you joy, go.....run....... thats good. If you value the Pentax way of taking pictures, really, is a few dollars at launch so much.. Take this into account..... the D90 launched at a street price of 999 US, its now 899, two years later.
The K-7 is now at a lower starting price than the D90, and it came out at 1150 just around a year ago.
By the time you go to upgrade, I think the K-5 will be at the same price as the Nikon.

So, take your pick.
Superior user experience or....... technically about the same but slightly cheaper at launch.
Oh and the K-r might be right up your ally anyway if you want something less for less.
In essence I am saying that you should not put so much worth in specs alone. The camera you use does not make you a better photographer, but it can be the difference between you being a happy/satisfied one to one that is not. I know you are not all professional photographers, and would advise you to follow your feeling and not so much spec sheets and prices. You do not need incrementally better performance, you need happiness and satisfaction.
As I said before, if you find that with the Nikon, GO!!!, but its much more likely you will actually prefer the K-5 if the reason you came to Pentax has not changed in the past few months.


Edit: Clarification. The title, My way or the Highway.... I am not saying you do things My way, more so looking from your personal perspective, or from the perspective of Pentax and how they intertwine. Each person has his own way, path. Each company tries to cater for that. Canon and Nikon cater for a larger performance market which Pentax has never really been part of the top tier.....excluding MF. Even with the LX, you can see trademark things like compactness and durability. I bought my PZ-1p on specs alone and regret not going for the MZ-S. Which is a very refined and crafted camera, in the vein of the K-7.
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