Say “Cheese”!
July 31, 2008
There I was, ambling around the town on an overcast and rather forlorn Friday [Edit 1st August: if proof were needed for the addled state of my brain, this is surely it. It wasn't Friday... it was Thursday!], quietly minding my own business, when what do I stumble into?
The market, that’s what!
“Strange” I muse, “thought the market only happened on Wednesdays and Saturdays”.
But apparently a “Home & Garden Market” is a fairly regular Friday [Edit: Thursday... see above!] feature of the town.
News to me. But then, I hardly ever go into town on a Friday [Edit: Thursday... see above!] so I wouldn’t know.
Anyway, had a mooch through. Then back again, cos one particular stall had caught my eye.
So had a quick word with the stallholder, who turned out to be a most obliging fellow, and consequently fired off a few shots.
Herewith, for your edification, the Lincolnshire Poacher Cheese stall… tralaa…
P.S.: If anyone’s interested, the cheeses (and other produce) are available from www.lincolnshirepoachercheese.com
Another day in the life of The Bear
July 29, 2008
Mooching through town I receive a text message on my mobile from my mate advising me that The Bear’s closed today for an indeterminate period due to “things”. But that the rear entrance is open should I be inclined to visit. Hmm. So, having attended to a few chores (pay a coupla bills, pick up the weekly supply of baccy, pop into my favourite camping supplies shop etc) my next port of call, inevitably, has to be The Bear. And whaddo I find? The presence of the cellar maintenance guys from the brewery, with a rather swish van…
Apparently they’re replacing all the beer lines. And replacing the beer cooler. So out goes the old one (a remnant of the days when I used to live there and look after the cellar)…
Well, with all this activity there’s nowt much for mate and I to do, so he makes me a coffee. Which of course is most welcome. So there am I, chilling out in the “beer garden” ‘neath one of the sun brollies…
when, bugger me! I espy something else new. Planters! To go with the hanging baskets…
And that’s not all! Apparently the landlord, in his infinite wisdom, has decreed the installation of yet another cctv camera in the garden…
But the excitement doesn’t end even there! Now (though you’ve only got my word for it), I’m not particularly given to taking photographs inside mens’ toilets. Could lead to all sorts of undesirable and unwarranted speculations. But today I just had to make an exception. For what should have appeared on the walls of the mens’ loos at the Bear? Graffiti! And not just any graffiti, but quite elaborate works of art. So of course I had to scurry therein equipped with camera…
Of course, it has to be said that these aren’t just the normal “quick while no-one’s looking” type efforts, but actual genuine “official” graffiti. In fact, I’m not even sure they should even be called graffiti.
Ok, so I’m an idiot
July 28, 2008
…so what’s new?
Regular visitors to this blog (all three or four of them) will be somewhat aware of the tussles I’ve been having with the Samsung GX20 dSLR that’s recently come into my possession.
More particularly, with the colour balance of the pics that are the product thereof.
More particularly still, with the way that Adobe Lightroom appears to render the RAW files… leading to said “defective” colour balance.
Well, y’know how it is… you have a tooth that isn’t quite aching, but is on the verge. So you just can’t resist probing it with your tongue… constantly. Until it actually does ache of course.
Or the itch that you just can’t resist scratching.
Or the niggly little problem that seems to defy all resolution. So try as you may to cast it from your mind, your thoughts just seem to keep returning to it.
That’s how its been with me and the GX20’s “colour issue”.
I’ve fiddled with it, abandoned it, returned to it, tweaked it, got close to getting it right but not quite, and become thoroughly frustrated and bored (in equal measure) by the whole affair.
Yet could I leave it alone? Could I buggery!
The more kindly mates of mine (um… mate as in singular) have charitably remarked upon my “tenacity”.
Tenacity nothing. Sheer pig-headed obstinacy more like.
And in this sheer pig-headed obstinacy I decided to do a bit more research. On matters such as RAW conversion, camera profiles (with particular regard to Lightroom) and the like.
You wouldn’t believe how much highly technical and completely incomprehensible information I’ve forced my poor brain (er… that alcohol-sodden mess of completely scrambled tissue that’s my excuse for a brain) to suck up.
Yet out of all of that emerged a pointer that seemed worth investigating…
A nifty little feature in Lightroom (one that I’d typically paid absolutely no attention to before) named “Camera Calibration”.
And right at the head of it there’s a function called “Profile”… with a little drop-down box to it offering two options: “ACR 4.4″ and “Embedded”.
“Well”, thinks I, “this looks interesting”.
So I do something virtually unprecedented… resort to the Lightroom helpfile. Which turns out to be a whole set of pages on the Web. Providing answers to all the problems that seemed insoluble when I first started using the program. Really wish I could get my head around the bizarre notion that help files are there to help. Ho hum.
Some more reading and, if I’m understanding it correctly, the “Embedded” option only appears in the Camera Calibration feature if the imported file contains its own camera profile differing from the default ACR (Adobe Camera Raw presumably) profile included in Lightroom.
The temptation to play is just too irresistable. So I re-import a RAW file from one of the first “colour test” shots I did with the GX20, and tentatively apply the “Embedded” profile option.
And don’t do very much else. A tad of sharpening. A slight lightening of the shadows. And that’s it.
And voila! It appears that the colour problem I’d been encountering has been virtually resolved… to my eyes anyway, and peering at the resulting JPEG suspiciously on a couple of different monitors (one colour calibrated, the other… um… not).
If this truly is the solution to the so-called “problem”, resolved simply by recognising that the RAW files produced by the GX20 each contain their own unique “profile” (which may well go some way toward explaining their massive size), then I have once again cause to berate myself for being such an idiot in not having realised this earlier.
And for not noticing that Lightroom (lovely program that it is… drool simper drool) enables the reading of such embedded profiles!
As it happens I did in fact remark, in a comment to an earlier post on this topic, that “I’m not yet totally convinced that the fault isn’t with me. Maybe I’m just doing something incredibly stupid…” Which is pretty much the same as stupidly not doing something I should be doing.
More to the point, I curse all my mates who’re Lightroom afficionados (yep, all one of them… and you know who you are) for not having mentioned this incredibly useful function to me, knowing that I was struggling with what seemed an almost insurmountable problem. (Mind you, such recalcitrance is I suppose excusable on the basis that its merely a reciprocation of my own sense of humour that compels me to stand by and watch unhelpfully whilst my mates struggle with problems for which I know the easy answers. Hmm. Chickens coming home to roost and all that.)
So I take back all that I may have rather unkindly said about the GX20. If the colour issue’s sorted this easily and I can use Lightroom to process the pics, then it is indeed a truly super camera.
For which no doubt my regular visitors (few though they may be, and likely to get much fewer if I keep on posting about this particular topic) will breathe somewhat more easily, in the comforting thought that they won’t have to suffer any more of my whining about this matter. Heavens be praised! (Gotta admit, I was beginning to get bored with it myself too.)
But at least in this tediously long iteration of my woes and travails re the GX20’s colour balance there exists a compelling testament to my idiocy, unfolding before your very eyes… virtually in real-time. Validation indeed of why I originally titled this blog “Adventures of an Idiot“! Laid bare for the whole world to see and gloat over. (Or shall I just delete all the pertinent posts? Hmm.)
As an aside to this whole affair, in the course of my fairly extended reading of all those incomprehensible white papers and stuff I absorbed the rather useful tidbit that in fact, certainly in photography and more specifically digital photography, there’s actually no such thing as accurate colour rendition. In any objective sense. Essentially it all comes down to what the “creator” (the photographer) sees as the most visually pleasing rendition. So there!
Back to the trusty old point&shoot
July 28, 2008
Having spent a fair while recently tinkering with the new GX20 (see immediately preceding posts) thought it was about time I gave myself a bit of a break. So hauled out the trusty old point&shoot once more… and ended up with a couple of half-way reasonable bug shots.
Plus a sky pic I’d taken a coupla weeks back, forgotten about, and just now rediscovered.
Just not gonna give in
July 26, 2008
The tussle with the GX20 continues! (See immediately previous posts)
Or rather, with its colour balance.
Or rather, with the apparent inability of Adobe Lightroom to render an accurate colour balance from RAW files produced by the GX20.
Well, I’m not having any of it!
Having begun to suspect some fundamental flaw in the way the Samsung GX20 was processing shots in-camera, I’m now beginning to backtrack from that a little bit.
Even using the software that’s supplied with the camera (Samsung RAW Converter 2.0) some tweaking appeared to be necessary to mitigate the effects of what appears to be a bias in favour of the red/magenta/purple spectrum in the darker (shadow) areas. And, almost without exception, the shots seem to be over-saturated. (Compensating for this is still causing me a few problems… but I’m getting there, slowly… largely by trial and error!)
In the course of trying to tackle this issue I’ve received suggestions from a number of people, quite a few of which have referred to various camera settings. But, being a bit of a Doubting Thomas by nature these suggestions have done little other than cause me to do a bit more in-depth reading about RAW files themselves.
Out of which emerged the fact that most of the camera settings (white balance, saturation, contrast, sharpness etc., and more especially the range of “digital colour filters”) only really have an impact on JPEGs; if one’s shooting exclusively in RAW (as I now do by default) they make no difference whatsoever. For all intents and purposes the only settings that impact RAW files are ISO, shutter speed, and aperture.
(This pdf from Adobe makes quite an interesting, and sufficiently short/non-technical, read!)
Thus, theoretically, any RAW converter app worth its salt should be able to satisfactorily process files from the camera… assuming it supports the DNG format that is.
Which Adobe Lightroom does! And given that Lightroom is my app of choice (for all sorts of reasons, not least of which is familiarity with the interface, and a few extra features that other RAW converters don’t seem to possess) I’m buggered if I’m going to be forced into using Samsung’s own RAW converter if I can possibly avoid it.
So, adopting “persistence” as my middle name, I repaired to my favourite watering hole (where, as frequenters of this blog and my Flickr photostream will already know, lighting conditions are somewhat “curious”) and fired off another batch of test shots.
Which I then processed entirely using Adobe Lightroom and utilising an import preset I’d configured to compensate for the apparent under-exposure and over-saturation that had seemed to be the hallmark of GX20 shots. And, I have to say, I’m not entirely dissatisfied with the results.
Whether this will be equally successful under other lighting conditions remains to be seen, but I’m not prepared to give in just yet!
Oh, perhaps I should also mention that this batch of shots were intended purely for me to play with exposure/colour/saturation… in terms of composition and focus (indoors, variable lighting, hand-held) well, basically they’re crap. So bear that in mind!
What makes this whole issue incredibly irritating, aside from the fact that I’m actually having to work at producing even half-way decent pics (which seriously goes against my nature) is that the price-bracket of this camera (in the UK at least) suggests its not aimed at the dSLR entry-level market but at the “serious” enthusiast, with aspirations to targetting the semi-pro market also.
In consequence of which I really did expect a somewhat better performance.
GX20… the continuing story
July 20, 2008
And now for the next enthralling episode about the breaking-in of the GX20.
Breaking in, smashing up… they’re only separated by the extent of my patience.
For the story so far read this.
So, to continue…
Well, now I come to think about it there’s not really a lot to add. I’ve confirmed, and indeed re-confirmed, that the Samsung GX20’s RAW files are rendered quite nicely with the supplied software (Samsung RAW Converter 2.0). But with my second testing of this I took it a stage further and developed a JPEG from the RAW file (full size, 100% quality) then inspected the resulting image not in my normal “quick and dirty” image browser (XNView - which actually doesn’t do any favours to pictures whatsoever) or even in Lightroom, but with Samsung’s own Samsung Master (their JPEG-editing app).
Yep. It’ll do for me. I have still to do some extensive testing under a variety of more rigorous lighting conditions of course, but I don’t really anticipate any major problems at all now.
Checking for a second opinion with the oracle whom I’d consulted previously, he suspected (though was by no means certain) there is still a hint of a magenta boost, but nothing especially significant.
By now feeling a bit more positive and adventurous, thought I’d try something else (being careful not to get too carried away of course).
As the Samsung RAW Converter has virtually sorted out the colour problem with the GX20, what about the GX10 I wondered?
Possibly having mentioned it once or twice here on the blog, but definitely having referred to it a few times on my Flickr photostream, shots from the GX10 have nearly always seemed to exhibit a somewhat blueish tone. Although I’ve been aware of it, and have occasionally sought to minimise it, the imbalance has never really bothered me as it tends (in my opinion anyway) to give the pics a rather “clean” attractive quality. But its niggled away in the back of my mind that its not quite as accurate a rendition as I’d like.
Thus, call up a few RAWs from the GX10 in the converter and, whaddya know? The blue’s gone! Sorted!
But this is where I start getting a bit silly.
So if the Samsung converter works pretty well with the Samsung files (no… I don’t, repeat don’t, want to hear anyone mutter “Well, that’s obvious isn’t it, you plonker!” Remember, I’m a self-confessed idiot) then how would the Canon converter (Digital Photo Professional) work with files from the 400D?
Would it, for example, eliminate that irritating yellowish tint that seems to bedevil a lot of the shots from the camera?
Clearly I was riding the crest of a wave here for the answer, in short, is yes it does!
(Oh… and somewhere along the way I had to make sure that all the relevant apps were reading the right colour profile for my machine. Not the default one but the one generated by my colour calibration thingy.)
However, all of these really great, really positive developments have created something of a dilemma for me. Moreover, a dilemma that I find curiously depressing. Not suicidally depressing admittedly (not yet, anyway), but a sort of “oh bugger” type depressing.
At the very heart of my methodology in dealing with pics (from camera right through processing to uploading to the web, and indeed archiving etc) is the rather delightful Adobe Lightroom.
All the fault of my mate of course. He’d sung its praises as a super general-purpose workhorse for dealing with RAW files.
Er… wait a mo’ though. This was the same “mate” that finally persuaded me to try working in RAW instead of JPEG in the first place. Dammit! That should have been warning enough for me. I dunno, some people just never learn.
Anyway, Adobe Lightroom. It is a super app. The first problem I had with it (and the one that delayed my embracing it fully for a good coupla months) was the interface. Its a bit complex. Not to put too fine a point on it, I couldn’t get my head around it at all. Nothing was where I expected it to be (in fact, I’m still discovering features I never knew it had!), and what I could see in terms of controls and suchlike often didn’t do what I thought they would, but something else entirely. Disconcerting, to say the least!
Naturally I rarely read any help files or manuals. That’s far too much like hard work for me. If the hands-on approach don’t crack it then it ain’t worth bothering with… that’s my philosophy.
I vividly remember my first try-out of it (and this was even before I’d started properly working in RAW (tried it thanks to mate’s badgering, too intimidating, gave up), so was simply doing an edit of a JPEG). Having made the desired changes to the pic, the next obvious step was to do a “Save as”… cos obviously I didn’t want to overwrite the original.
So I looked for the “Save as” button, or link, or something. And looked. And looked.
Weird. There isn’t one. Yet my mate had clearly said (frequently, in a boringly repetitive way) that one of Lightroom’s strong points was its non-destructive editing feature. So it has to offer some sort of a “Save as” option, surely? Perhaps, thinks I, I need to close the program and it’ll pop up a little dialog asking me if I want to save the work, and if so, what as.
So I close the program. No, it doesn’t. And bang goes a fair bit of work. Sod it! That took me back to my very early days in computing when 20Mb (yes, that’s megabytes!) was considered a huge hard drive, and I… no… that’s a story for another day.
(That’s not strictly true actually. The “bang goes a fair bit of work” statement, that is. For I subsequently discovered that Lightroom edits “persist” until one selects the “reset” option for the relevant image/s.)
Anyway, after the obligatory wailing, gnashing of teeth and beating of breast (cos I didn’t know about the “persistence” feature at the time), some head-scratching. Then open the program again and hunt for the “Save as” control. Don’t find it. Sit back, have a think. Then another hunt. Then close the program in disgust. Leave it for a coupla weeks whilst I have a good old sulk.
But eventually irritation gets the better of me. At computers (damn stupid things); at Lightroom (damn stupid program); at my mate (damn stupid… well, perhaps not); at Life in general. So I fire off a quick (and, now I come to think of it, rather pleading) email to him, suggesting that a little bit of guidance in the highly complex task of saving an edit wouldn’t go amiss.
So he, ever patient (knows me too well, obviously), explains.
That button, that big one, the second of those two big buttons down on the left-hand side, the first clearly marked “Import”, the second clearly marked “Export”. Well, try clicking the Export button.
Oh yes. Of course. Blindingly obvious, isn’t it? Duh.
What made the entire episode even more infuriating is that in my saner moments (rare though they may be) I like to consider myself something of a computer geek. I play with them. I work with them. And when I’ve finished working with them, I play with them again. Have done for years. And years. And years.
But see a big button with “Export” marked on it and interpret that as being a “Save as” option? Not a chance. Think I should just pack in all this computer lark here and now.
Having overcome that first major hurdle I began to take to Lightroom like a duck to water.
Twiddle this, slide that, click something or other else. The features are marvellous (and I still haven’t sussed, and probably even discovered, all of them), plus some real snazzy ones that I’ve been unable to find on any other photo-editing prog.
I like the way it works. I like the subtlety and quality of the changes you can make with it. I even like (once I got used to it) the interface! Then I started working with RAW files and wow! The program really comes into its own. Such that its become my photo-editing program of choice. In fact, the only one I ever use… until now, that is.
Criticisms? Yeah, two (until just recently I only had one of course).
First, its use of system resources. Adobe recommends a minimum 1Gb RAM. And the machine I do my photo work on only has 512Mb! Ok, Lightroom runs, and if working with JPEGs there’s no real problem. But RAW files can be another matter entirely.
When working with those from the Canon it wasn’t too bad (though I had to slow down my workflow just a little bit). The GX10 presented somewhat more of a problem with its larger file sizes, and many was the time the machine would just drag its heels or the program would freeze on me until I learned a coupla tricks to overcome the bottlenecks. But files from the GX20? Well, the only way to return to comfortable working would be to increase the RAM. That’s if I continue to use Lightroom of course.
Now in fairness I can’t really say that’s a criticism of the program per se. After all, resource-hungriness isn’t unique to that app… most notable offender being Microsucks themselves of course.
And the second criticism is this most recent discovery… that Lightroom doesn’t support all RAW files equally!
Adobe themselves say…
“The camera raw functionality in Adobe® Photoshop® software provides fast and easy access within Photoshop to the “raw” image formats produced by many leading professional and midrange digital cameras. By working with these “digital negatives,” you can achieve the results you want with greater artistic control and flexibility while still maintaining the original “raw” files.”
They go on to say…
“The Photoshop Camera Raw plug-in (2.3 or higher) now also supports raw files in the DNG format. Find out more about the benefits of the Digital Negative, a publicly documented raw file format recently announced by Adobe.”
At this point I should perhaps explain that Samsung’s RAW files are in the DNG format.
For anyone unfamiliar with this, here (again) is what Adobe themselves (who came up with the format!) have to say about it…
“Raw file formats are becoming extremely popular in digital photography workflows because they offer creative professionals greater creative control. However, cameras can use many different raw formats — the specifications for which are not publicly available — which means that not every raw file can be read by a variety of software applications. As a result, the use of these proprietary raw files as a long-term archival solution carries risk, and sharing these files across complex workflows is even more challenging.
The solution to this growing problem? The Digital Negative (DNG), a publicly available archival format for the raw files generated by digital cameras. By addressing the lack of an open standard for the raw files created by individual camera models, DNG helps ensure that photographers will be able to access their files in the future.”
And finally Adobe, on their own website, specifically list the RAW files produced by both the Samsung GX10 and the GX20 as being supported by Lightroom!
(Quotes from the Adobe Lightroom website apart from the latter which is quoted from www.adobe.com/products/dng/)
I suppose in fairness I have to acknowledge that Lightroom does support the Samsung files, but only in the sense that it will actually read them and translate the data into recognisably an image. But as for rendering it correctly, well, forget it.
Which means I’ve now, finally, come to the source of my “oh bugger” type depression.
For what all this means is that there’s now a high probability that in future I shall have to change my working methodology insofar as using each manufacturer’s proprietary apps for processing pics from both the Samsungs and the Canon.
Doesn’t mean that I shall abandon Lightroom entirely of course. Oh no. I like it far too much for that. It’ll always come in handy as a prog for emergency fixes, or for working with JPEGs, or possibly even (as my mate suggested) working with tiffs (but only when I’ve upgraded the RAM, cos tiff files are bloody huge!).
Well, I think that’s about it for the mo’. And for someone who started off with having “not really a lot to add” I think I’ve probably excelled myself!
Latest on the GX20 saga
July 18, 2008
There were three issues that concerned me… under-exposure, loss of detail/resolution, and an inaccurate colour-cast.
There’s also the matter of the large file sizes. Though that’s not really an issue… more of an inconvenience that’ll no longer be a problem once I’ve increased the RAM on my computer.
Taking them in order then:
Under-exposure
This could well be a lens issue and as such I’m not letting myself get too concerned by it until after I’ve tried some shots with a different lens. Its also conceivable that in part its a side-effect of the colour-balance issue, though I doubt it. In any event its fairly easily remedied, either pre- or post- shot, so can hardly be called an “issue” so much as a “quirk”.
Loss of Detail
This was of much greater concern, and the source of much of my initial disappointment.
Of course, this too could have been a lens issue, but equally as well may not have been. And if not, then not so easily remedied. In fact, if a sensor- or processor-related problem then I doubt if it could be remedied at all short of a firmware upgrade maybe. Hence my concern.
However, that impression was formed on the basis of the dozen or so pics I shot with the camera virtually straight out the box (just couldn’t wait, could I?) and conceivably I hadn’t paid quite as much attention either to the settings or in actually taking the shots as I should have done.
And when I inspected the track and river shots I’d done, aside from the persistent colour issue I was much more satisfied.
I subsequently sent one of the RAW files from the river set to a mate for closer scrutiny by a much more experienced eye than mine, and his opinion was, to quote “the GX20 has sort of a clarity that is intriguing, its the detail in the images that is clear and the file looks neat in appearance, think if the white balance is sussed it will be bloody good too”, which really does sum it up quite nicely.
And that’s with the bog-standard lens that came with the camera!
So I think the “loss of detail issue” isn’t an issue after all and can be confidently forgotten.
But there still remains…
Colour Cast
This is clearly a white balance problem and, after looking closely at all the shots, plus taking on board the various comments made about the pics I’d posted to Flickr (which drew attention to either a pink or a purple tone in the shots) I began to suspect (and eventually confirmed to my satisfaction) a problem with the magenta.
With a lot of tinkering in post-processing its possible that the colour can be corrected, but that would inevitably entail a helluva lot of work on each individual image just in getting them to look as they should look. And I’m not at all convinced that configuring a camera-specific preset in Lightroom (my RAW editing app of choice) to do all this work on image import would necessarily be effective for every image taken under a wide range of circumstances.
Now I’m not totally opposed to enhancing a particular colour or manipulating the colour balance at post-processing stage, providing I’m starting out with an image that provides a fairly accurate colour balance! Absent that and one is no longer looking at an artistic interpretation (hmm… please forget I just used the word “artistic”. Don’t know what came over me for a moment there!) but at a flawed image. Not good!
Curiously, this matter of colour balance also seems to be exhibited by the other cameras (blue with the GX10, yellow with the 400D), but nowhere near to the same extent and not with every shot. In other words, the anomalies are at a reasonably acceptable level, and not every pic merits tweaking.
However, it was suggested to me that maybe the problem’s not with the camera itself but with the way its writing RAW files, especially if the version of firmware its using to do this is different to that of the GX10 (which it is).
So two ideas came out of this… either use the RAW conversion software that comes with the camera (which I don’t), or make sure I’ve got the latest stable version of Lightroom (which I hadn’t).
Now, I’ve got the RAW converter app that came with the GX10 installed though I never use it, preferring instead to use Lightroom. So I’d not bothered to install the later version with the GX20, not even having considered using it.
However, I uninstalled the GX10 version then installed the later version… and whaddya know? The shots look fine! (Curiously, they also load a damn sight quicker than with Lightroom.) Not even a hint of colour imbalance.
Feeling a tad more optimistic, I set to thinking… So if its the way the data’s being read as opposed to a flaw in the camera itself (or indeed in its settings), then maybe upgrading to the latest version of Lightroom might render a similar result.
And that’s what I did.
Hmm. Well, Lightroom continued to render the files with a magenta tone bias in the white balance (confirming my original diagnosis at least)… but this time showing that in the control panel as a +10 increase. Which it hadn’t been doing before… or at least, not that I’d noticed.
Knocking that +10 off (to effective 0) I exported some test JPEGs. They were definitely an improvement but, alas, not quite enough. However, this does suggest that if I want to persist in using Lightroom for processing the GX20 files (which is my preferred option) then at least I can overcome the problem relatively easily simply by setting the tone slider for that colour spectrum in the opposite direction.
Whoopee!
But another couple of possibilities emerge from this.
It looks as though, if I use the Samsung-supplied RAW converter I may well be able to see the files rendered as they should without any additional tweaking on my part. And if that’s the case, that further suggests that processing done in-camera will probably be okay, meaning that JPEGs should come straight off-camera fine.
Which of course needs testing. And if that’s the case, then maybe I could use the GX20 principally for shooting JPEGs, reverting to RAW only on really critical shots or where I anticipate a lot of post-processing. (In other words, use it as my main “events” camera.)
Now this may seem a bit of a bizarre approach for using a dSLR, but it does actually have certain merits.
For example, when I did the Carnival Against the Arms Trade shoot in Brighton earlier this year the folk down there were eager to grab some pics urgently (practically straight off-camera) in order to send out to various media (who were squawking for photos) in virtual real-time.
Yet that presented horrendous problems as they simply weren’t geared up to handle RAWs, and neither did they, or I, have the right connector to simply process in-camera and then plug the GX10 into their computer. Nor, weirdly, did they have a card-reader on hand (neither, stupidly, did I!). We came up with a work-around eventually but by that time they’d grabbed initial shots from someone else so I missed out on what could have been a really super opportunity.
Shooting in JPEG (plus carrying a card-reader of course!) would have sorted that problem. In fact, the problem would never have arisen.
(Memo to self… in future be sure to carry a card reader and PC connection cables for both cameras whenever attending an event. I don’t call myself an idiot for nothing y’know!)
Then there’s the matter of the file sizes. Were I to shoot principally in JPEG I wouldn’t have to invest in a lot of new high-capacity cards, nor would I be stretching computer resources to their limits if/when importing the files into Lightroom.
At best this is only a partial solution for it’d only really be relevant to my “events stuff”. Where my “scenic” shots are concerned I think I’d still want to shoot RAW, preferring the much greater flexibility in processing, and quality-retention, that such allows.
Nevertheless, things are looking a lot more hopeful now.
In conclusion then, I have to ask myself how I feel about the camera now.
I won’t claim to be ecstatic. And I’m still mildly disappointed by not having experienced that joy of playing with a new toy that I feel I should have experienced. In that sense, I feel somewhat cheated.
But at least now I don’t have the inclination to chuck the bloody thing straight back to the place from whence it came. In fact, if my mate’s assessment bears out, then the thing will prove to have been a worthwhile acquisition.
And you can be assured, now I’ve started this particular topic I’ll be posting news of later developments.
Well, that’ll be something to look forward to, now won’t it? (Heh heh)
































