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Nikon D90 - 4.5fps, HD video, 12 megapixels CMOS

Nikon has introduced some of the technologies we might expect to see from Sony, apparently using the IMX021 sensor (the pixel count on the long edge is 4288, rather than 4272 as normally processed from a Sony Alpha 700 file, but this is within the usual limits of different raw conversions). The D90 is an A700-class camera for £699 but includes Live View with face detection contrast-detect focusing, 720p HD movie recording up to 5 minutes, 4.5fps continuous shooting, ISO to 3200 (6400 HI), and Auto Distortion Correction when fitted with current Nikon lenses.

Click to continue reading “Nikon D90 - 4.5fps, HD video, 12 megapixels CMOS”

Slim Cyber-shot lifestyle models launched

Well, it looks as if the 14th August UK press conference for exciting digital camera news may not be about the Alpha 900 after all - Sony has just officially announced that some colourful little Cyber-shot models with ISO 3200 capability will be unveiled there, and no mention of the A900. Roll on September 9th!

Here’s Sony’s release on the new Cyber-shots - I apologise for leaving the hyperbolic advertising style adjectives (unusable editorially, and just a waste of words) in place:

Click to continue reading “Slim Cyber-shot lifestyle models launched”

Sony’s flash ‘revolution’ - the HVL F58AM

Sony has announced the September introduction of the most powerful flash yet for the Alpha system, which incorporates a brand new body design allowing optimum bounce flash illumination regardless of how you hold the camera.

Click to continue reading “Sony’s flash ‘revolution’ - the HVL F58AM”

Sony Alpha 350 - a Creative Review

The introduction of a £399 (street price, RRP £449) DSLR with 14.2 megapixels – with or without a useful type of Live View – should have been applauded by reviewers. It’s the single most important point about the camera. No other DSLR approaches this image size and resolution at such a low price.

Click to continue reading “Sony Alpha 350 - a Creative Review”

Sony Alpha 200 - guided tour and overview

The Sony DSLR A200 is now on sale, following the end of Alpha 100 production. Although it is without any doubt the Alpha 100 replacement mentioned by Sony executives in October 2007, when they first revealed that the 100 was no longer being made, it is not an exact equivalent and represents a mixture of upgraded performance and simplified specification. Because it has gone in two directions at the same time, the A200 poses a problem for A100 owners.

Click to continue reading “Sony Alpha 200 - guided tour and overview”

Apple Aperture 2.0 processes A700 raw

Apple’s Aperture 2.0 is a tedious program to test, with all its creation of ‘projects’ and ‘libraries’, ‘albums’, ‘vaults’ and nonstandard GUI, and it isn’t fast in processing files or passing them to Photoshop (which it does in 16-bit form, just another step to reverse before saving as far as I’m concerned). However, it’s handling Alpha 700 raw quite well. And it does things differently, with non-destructive raw editing, stacks of image versions, and so on.

Click to continue reading “Apple Aperture 2.0 processes A700 raw”

Sony photo contest - shoot a tape, win an A100

Sony Europe’s Recording Media & Energy (RME) division today announced a new LTO-4 photo contest promotion that offers the chance to win one of three digital cameras from Sony – in return for creative pictures of LTO-4 tape cartridges. The competition can be entered by distributors, resellers and end-customers of Sony’s LTO-4, its highest capacity media.

Click to continue reading “Sony photo contest - shoot a tape, win an A100″

Sony Alpha 700 full specification sheet

System
Camera type: Digital SLR with built-in flash and interchangeable lenses
Lens mount: Sony mount; compatible with Minolta A-type bayonet mount
Lens compatibility: All Sony a lenses and Konica Minolta MAXXUM / DYNAX lenses

Click to continue reading “Sony Alpha 700 full specification sheet”

Sony Alpha 700 official press release

D-SLR-α700

TOUGH, RESPONSIVE α700 DELIVERS STUNNING NEXT-GENERATION PICTURE QUALITY… FROM SHOOTING TO VIEWING

Sep 6, 2007

  • Superb picture quality with newly developed Sony 12.24 effective megapixel Exmorâ„¢ CMOS sensor and brand new high-speed BIONZâ„¢ processor with RAW noise reduction
  • Ultra-responsive operation with fast, high-accuracy 11-point autofocus and 5fps continuous shooting
  • New ‘Quick Navigation’ function for instant access to camera settings
  • Rugged magnesium body with dust/moisture resistant seals
  • ‘PhotoTV HD’ Full HD image display on new BRAVIA televisions
  • 3-inch 921k dot photo-quality LCD screen and bright, high-magnification viewfinder

Click to continue reading “Sony Alpha 700 official press release”

Leaked Alpha 700 specifications

TEMPORARY website pages on the afternoon (GMT) of September 5th managed to leak the entire specification sheet and several new PR images of the advanced amateur Alpha model, along with its name - the Alpha 700. You wouldn’t pick a wife or husband on the basis of their on-paper specification, so remember, the only way to partner up with a DSLR and be happy is to try it in your hands first.

Click to continue reading “Leaked Alpha 700 specifications”

Sony GPS-CS1 tracker and software

THE FIRST QUESTION anyone asks about the Sony GPS-CS1 device is whether it will work with their non-Sony digital camera. The answer is ‘yes’ but you may need to buy some extra software, as it only comes with software to link up to Sony Picture Motion Browser. If you can ensure that you buy the product sold as GPS-CS1KA it should include a copy of this software in full. If you buy the product coded only as GPS-CS1, it may have nothing apart from a patch-updater program you are supposed to use with your existing Sony installation. So make sure you know exactly what you are buying (there appears to be no price difference, and very few retailers are making any distinction between the two bundles). There seems to be no reason to continue offering the kit with the updater only.

Click to continue reading “Sony GPS-CS1 tracker and software”

Bags & cases

When Konica Minolta’s photographic division closed in April 2006, the Minolta Club of Great Britain (operated by Icon Publications Ltd) acquired a mix of older stock, some dating back as far as 40 years, but much from the late MD and early AF era. We have priced these competitively, after studying international prices and availability, and our stock levels. All prices include VAT (UK and Europe only) and postage (to anywhere in the world, by Airmail Small Packet post). You will receive full invoice documentation, which is attached to the outside of the package in case customs wish to confirm contents and value.

KMB-1 Backpack bag - reduced to £29.95 UK only (£23 + postage inc VAT - closeout bargain!). We still have three cartons of these bags remaining and they take up a lot of storage space. I’m keen to clear them out so we have cut the price in Photoworld magazine. Readers have now had a chance to respond if they want one, so we are extended the offer to this internet page as from Nov 28th. I have also added a single Europe/World price of £39.95 - zero VAT export tax-free covers the additional £7 postage cost for destinations outside Europe.

KMB-1

The KMB-1 backpack bag is a bit of a legend - it is small, intended for a mini outfit not a world trek, but extremely well designed with a clever spring-loaded, button operated retracting shoulder strap that acts as a grab handle when stowed.

Biker

The photographs should explain what this bag is all about. Price are £29.95 to the UK, £39.95 to Europe or worldwide.

The basic bag price is now only £19.57 net of VAT. It weighs just under 1,750g packed and postage varies from £12 to £19 for Europe and World purchases - non-trackable, non-signed for. If you want trackable and signed for, European postage can be as high as £32 (Spain, Italy, Greece etc - northern Europe is a bit cheaper) and world, £36.

KMB-1 strap retractstrap

This is the retractable shoulder/grab strap function shown in action. The reel-holding unit interferes with camera removal and you have to learn how to do this; the camera is turned 90 degrees so the handgrip end emerges over the flap, before you try to lift it out. If you try to pull a 7D out without first turning it like this it is difficult. But - for the same basic reason - the camera is extremely secure in this pack. It could fall out of a car with the bag unzipped and the contents would not be likely to spill out.

Backstrap Backstrap open

This is how the backpack strap stows. It can also be detached and hidden entirely in the laptop pocket. This bag is small enough to wear as a chest pack. Strap it on backwards when working, normal way when walking. The straps on this bag are very generous, and it may be loose on the smaller frame even with full tightening (alteration not too difficult). Main point - it’s not going to be difficult to wear even for the largest photographer.

pouch flapdown

And this shows the front flap pouch, and how it lowers to get to the main camera compartment without fully opening (your gear can not fall out with it on your back if you forget to do up the zip).

puterpouch

Finally, you can see that there is a back pocket for a laptop which is generous in size for a Powerbook 12 inch, and at each end, two small pockets ideal for batteries (or laptop AC adaptor). What will this bag hold: tested by me - Dynax 7D with 28-75mm lens - perfect fit in the centre space, lens down. 17-35mm or 11-18mm, with hood, laid sideways, right hand end. Clear space between camera grip and lens well maintained. Left hand divided compartment - lens up to 75-300mm D; 3600HS(D) flash. Would take 5600 with a smaller lens, or would take large lens alone with divider removed. 70-200mm SSM fits, with the divider placed above the one to the left of the camera, to ensure no rubbing. Tight fit but goes. You can’t get the camera out without removing the lens first if you try to fit a real monster like this in the bag. Side pockets will hold 6X NP400 batteries total, front pockets 8X AA, CF cards etc.

UK order - £29.95 including VAT and post:


Europe or Worldwide order - £39.95 (inc VAT Europe, tax free elsewhere, including post to any part of the world (click button BELOW not above):



cs5
The soft case CS-5 is for the Dynax/Maxxum 5 film SLR (and also fit the Dynax 3 and 4, 40 and 60 but not earlier larger body SLRs like the 505). Please note this is NOT for the Dynax/Maxxum 5D and will not fit the digital body at all. It’s for the film model 5. Our price is only £15 ($30) shipped to anywhere in the world. If you would like a similar soft case for the 5D with certain lenses only, try the CS DG-8, officially made for the A1/A2 but a very neat fit on the 5D too.


DG8
For Dimage 5, 7, 7i, 7Hi, A1, A2 and A200 owners we have the excellent leather-look (synthetic) camera pouch CS DG-8 which is strapless (you lock the camera’s own strap into a small press stud loop, which prevents the pouch from being lost).DG8 open
It has a velcro closure, and inside the case lid is a pocket which accepts a spare NP400/NP800 battery or 4X AA. This a minimal, tasteful, practical protective ever-ready case for your 7/A series at £12 ($24). This case will also fit the Dynax 5D or Alpha 100 with 50mm f1.7, f1.4, 28mm f2 or 2.8, 35mm f2, 50mm f3.5 macro, 24mm f2.8 or similar size of wide-angle to standard lens. It will not fit the 5D/A100 with 18-70mm zoom or any similar lens.



CS-DG105BKFor X1 owners, we have two different cases. Both seem to be popular. The first one featured here has a lengthy model number CS-DG 104 BK which you read on the pack in the photo. It’s made of a kind of reinforced hitec synthetic, with an almost denim-like grey texture. To keep things simple, this is £10 ($20) posted anywhere - again, to anywhere in the world.



Leather X-caseThe alternative doesn’t come packaged. It’s a real leather case, and my own favourite. Made for the X1 it will also fit the XG, XT, X31, X21, and X20. These are loose, maximum packaging is a polybag, but they are all identical real leather with the embossed logo. They have a belt loop which is sewn, not openable, so once on your belt, they can not easily be lost or filched. Again, our price is £10 ($20) including postage and packing to anywhere in the world. My mobile phone is living in one of these right now. They are also a good billfold or change wallet.



G-series caseThis leather case is made for the Dimage G500, G600, G400, G530 and similar shaped cameras. It costs £10 ($20) including worldwide post.



CG-1000 with lens
The CS-DG1000 case for the Z-series is actually a super, versatile all round case suitable for flashguns and lenses. This accepts all Z models from Z1 to Z6, and many other similar cameras.
Zcase with flashIt is also an excellent belt case for items like flashguns, or lenses such as the 24-105mm or 50mm macro; it will fit the 11-18mm or 17-35mm with lens hood attached and reversed. It is a perfect case the the 3600HS(D) flashgun - an exact fit, and the battery pocket inside even fits the shoe stand. In fact, as a lens or flash case, with belt loop or shoulder strap option, this is much better than many alternatives. It costs £10 ($20) including postage.



Strap Set II
Here is a vintage strap from the days of the Dynax/Maxxum xi models, with a sewn-on Creative Expansion Card case. Apart from having a European ‘Dynax’ name on the strap - rather spoils for US buyers, sorry - a little surgery with a craft knife quickly converts the velcro-closed holder to accept two CF Cards neatly, a little tightly, but safely and securely. Our price £8 (a mere $16) shipped anywhere, you do the surgery yourself. You can also cut through the threads attaching the card wallet, and have a perfectly good new Dynax wide strap - it takes seconds, and the strap is unaffected except for pinhole marks where the sewing used to be. NEWS UPDATE… THIS STRAP’S WALLET IS AN ABSOLUTELY PERFECT, EXACT FIT for Sony Memorystick Pro Duo cards - compatible with the new Alpha, using Sony’s affordable CF adaptor, and probably with your existing DSLR. This strap/case will hold, perfectly, six Memorystick Pro Duo cards. It will not hold SD cards, they are too large.


You can view the contents of your shopping basket and check out with Paypal payment (credit cards can be used) or continue shopping. There’s a basket check button on all pages, don’t panic, nothing will be lost if you leave this page and go to another.

Studio light-table technique

YOU MAY want to learn exactly how I shoot the product photographs which appear in my own articles here at Photoclubalpha. I use a studio light table with an opal plexiglass transilluminated scoop. This is the method I have used now for over 25 years and it’s saved me a lot of time, and earned me a lot of money.

Click to continue reading “Studio light-table technique”

Useful Resources & Links

E-Books from Gary Friedman are user guides, mines of information and all-round treasuries of inspiration for Alpha owners - see www.friedmanarchives.com for details and how to buy them either as a physical printed book, or a download. His e-Books include:

  • Dynax 7D/5D
  • Dimage A1/A2 book (equally applicable to the Dimage A200)
  • Alpha 100
  • Alpha 700
  • Alpha 200/300/350

dPreview

dPreview is recognised as one of the most important camera test sites on the web. While some visitors complain of bias, we do not believe that is the case, and Phil Askey’s test report on the Alpha 100 while missing a few minor plus points was very fair. This report also showed that the Sony Alpha 100 has (and still has) the highest extinction resolution of all the 10.2 megapixel class DSLRs. dPreview has now covered the Alpha 350 and 200 as well as the 700, a different staff writer covering each camera.

Read Phil’s review.

Phil has also done a review of the Alpha 700.

Alpha 200 review - Alpha 350 review

Raw converters

Sony Alpha owners will find that Adobe Photoshop CS2/3 and Photoshop Elements 4.0/5.0/6.0 include a good .ARW raw file converter in the current version of Adobe Camera Raw 3.x/4.x (anything later than 3.4 will process Alpha 100 .ARW files, 4.3 or later is needed for .ARW2 files from the A700/200 and is much improved over the first compatible version, 4.2, so upgrade your installation if you are still using 4.2). Earlier versions will not handle Alpha files. 4.5 handles 350 files well.

You can also convert .ARW raw files from the Sony Alpha 100 into Adobe .DNG (Digital Negative) universal raw files, readable by earlier versions Adobe Photoshop 7, CS and Elements 3. Please note that downloading auto-updates for Photoshop does NOT automatically update the raw converter, and this must be done as a separate, manual download. There are two download options, both entirely free, for the DNG converter and the ACR 3.x/4.x plug-in (which requires CS2/3 Mac/PC; or PSE 3/4 for Mac, PSE 4/5 for Windows; and is not compatible with earlier versions):

Windows download page

Mac download page

Adobe Lightroom, a dedicated raw file conversion and ‘digital asset management’ utility, which is a complete stand alone product including A100 conversion, can be purchased from:

http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshoplightroom/

There’s a great Mac-only raw file developer for the A100, A700, A200 and previous Konica Minolta DSLRs - RAWDeveloper from Iridient. This is really fast, allows scaled exports, has superb noise reduction and is a highly professional workflow solution.

Another alternative is Silkypix Developer Studio, a Japanese developed raw file converter, which has something in common with Sony’s Image Converter SR, and will - again - handle both the new A700/A200 and A100 file formats and previous Minolta and Konica Minolta raw files, for those with mixed systems. This is available in both Windows and Mac versions.

Bibble, a popular commercial multi-format raw converter and browser utility, now supports the Alpha 100/700/200. We have had some problems with scaled-up output showing unwanted raster-like patterns, but for normal size files BibblePro offers NoiseNinja which is one of the best ways of dealing with the Alpha 100’s rather strong high-ISO noise levels.

DxOptics Pro also now supports some Konica Minolta/Sony DSLRs and includes automatic correction for a few Minolta/Sony lenses. This deals with chromatic aberration, fringes, curvature of lines and vignetting of brightness towards the corners of the field, and it is especially useful with digital format zooms. They do not appear to have fulfilled the promise of serious support, and are concentrating on the obvious cashcows of Canon and Nikon ownership percentages. The latest v5.2 update brings the Alpha 700, 200 and 350 into the fold with an odd set of lenses but omits the 300 entirely.

An excellent top-level raw .MRW/.ARW converter, if a little hard to master, is Capture One Pro made by Phase One, the Danish digital medium-format back manufacturer. The good news is that if you buy a SanDisk Extreme III memory card right now (as from October 16th 2006) a version normally costing $99 called CaptureOne Pro LE is included on the card free of charge. You can also download trial software, and upgrade this LE version to the full product, by visiting Phase One’s website. The latest versions are good at handling high ISO noise but Phase One is fairly slow to add new camera models.

Recently, a Mac-only converter came to light, RawPhotoProcessor. This is simple and deep. It reveals a lot about the image through reading the makernote and metadata comments hidden in each file. It is fast and small. It has no noise reduction beyond simply chroma blurring, and no sharpening option.

http://www.raw-photo-processor.com/RPP/Downloads.html

Another commercial program we really like - it has a very good interface - which works well with the 5D, 7D and A100 but awaits A700 addition is LightZone from Lightcrafts Inc. This is a feature-laden full image management system which can match Aperture or Lightroom on most levels and even replace Photoshop for some work.

http://www.lightcrafts.com/download/download.html

This program is not very well marketed internationally, yet. Of all the commercial offerings it has the most potential, I think, for cross-platform universal application. It is apparently JAVA-based.

A good PC-only raw converter, small enough to run on palmtop devices and Origami platform machines, is RawTherapee. This independently written experimental converter has won many converts amongst Alpha 700 users, as it offered support right from the start and overcame most of the smurrging issues present in high ISO detail:

http://www.rawtherapee.com

Let us know of any other raw converter links, and I will add them.


Support and resources

For legacy support and information on Konica Minolta photo-digital products, we currently recommend the website below, which has not disabled all its downloads of software, firmware, etc: http://ca.konicaminolta.com/support/americas/

For information on the Sony Alpha system and the new Sony Alpha 100 DSLR, the UK Sony site now has some really excellent resources in place. Use the High Bandwidth option if you possibly can, and expore both ‘Assignments’ and ‘Equipment’: http://www.sony.co.uk/nextlevel

The bimonthly magazine for freelance photographers, f2 Freelance+Digital, has a dedicated website where many PDF articles can be downloaded. We have included on this site many PDFs from our Photoworld magazine. f2 magazine moved to new publishers from the October/November 2006 edition, but our website remains operational. Registration is necessary but paid subscription is only required to access the archives of older articles - new editions are free for two months to all comers, subscribers can download from well over 100 previous articles: http://www.f2photo.co.uk/

You can view a selection of full size, 10.2 megapixel images taken with the new Sony Alpha 100 on David Kilpatrick’s pBase pages. At the last count there were over 70 examples and the Alpha images had clocked up over 100,000 views. There’s lots of technical information on the tests, examples, and comparison present on these pages. These include comments, captions and EXIF shooting data: http://www.pbase.com/davidkilpatrick

There is an independent Minolta M-AF forum and website, Dyxum, which offers many useful resources including lens tests and storage card speed comparisons. Unlike dPreview, Dyxum does not ban participants for being associated with specialist websites like Photoclubalpha, and has kindly promoted and helped us in the past: http://www.dyxum.com

Yahoogroups include one dedicated entirely to Minolta which in practice is used by Sony Alpha owners as well - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Minolta/. There is also a Yahoogroup called SonyAlpha, at least until Sony’s legal dept ask them to cease and desist: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SonyAlpha/.

A busy forum is well established at Dynaxdigital - http://www.dynaxdigital.com/

Carl Garrard and T E Morrison have set up a site called Alphamountworld which offers forums, reviews and articles and will be reporting from major trade shows in the US. Carl is also going to post articles from his show visits or press invites to Photoworldalpha.

A useful group with a strong photography emphasis is UKExpert - forums and galleries and many further onwards links. It was a pleasure to meet Andy from UKExpert at the Sony Alpha 700 launch, and great to know that Sony value the presence of independent opinion-formers.

There is a photo sharing site (by far the most popular web activity for photographers!) at Shootalpha.com. This is, after all, what camera clubs and even august professional associations do - share their pictures and pass generally not unkind comments on them to each other, with the occasional bit of constructive crit. Do not expect to encounter the photo equivalent of Simon Cowell stalking the gallery pages, you will be welcomed as a beginner and find your level quickly. There is also an active forum.


Dealers and spares

At Icon Publications Ltd we now have just a selection of Minolta glass filters; MD/AF hard lens cases (many types); Dynax branded original camera straps; Minolta leather cases ideal for iPhones, iPods etc; and Vectis BPS-1 battery base grips for the Vectis S-1.

Former Minolta Club administrator Adrian Paul has his own specialist business selling spares, accessories and smaller hard-to-obtain products from the Minolta and Konica Minolta ranges, and will be offering Sony Alpha system products in future. The Photostore is a mail-order business only and Adrian offers a fast, excellent standard of service and knowledge: http://www.photostore-uk.com/

Lens rental is also available from the Photostore in the UK, but applies only to Photoworld magazine subscribers, and full details are printed in each magazine. There is a new Alpha lens rental service operating in the USA - http://www.alphalensrental.com/index.html.

In New Zealand, the Sony Service Centre for Alpha is http://www.phototronic.co.nz/ - they are also dealers, an ideal one-stop shop for purchases and repairs, run by a former Minolta UK Ltd service department staff member.

Pro dealers Calumet have the Alpha system now as a main line, after decades of sidelining the Minolta mount. This is very important and will put the Alpha in front of Britain’s working professionals: http://www.calumetphoto.co.uk/.

London Camera Exchange Colchester is now a Sony ACE dealer and has committed to supporting this website and our magazine. Manager David Jenner will always try to offer the best deal to Photoclubalpha members! Email them on colchester@LCEgroup.co.uk or call 01206 573444.

To find out about the values of used cameras, visit the Monark camera price guide site - http://www.cameravalues.com/

Thank you for visiting the photoclubalpha.com site. If you would like to receive future information by email from Sony UK about the Alpha system, and news of future developments for the former Minolta Club of Great Britain, please email david@photoclubalpha.com using the heading ‘Add to Alpha mailing list’.


Sony Alpha 100 June 2006 launch report

Shortly before the June 6th 2006 worldwide launch of the Sony Alpha digital SLR system the European press learned that major title editors would meet in Marrakesh for the unveiling of the Alpha 100. No-one anticipated being driven miles into the desert-like countryside of Oued Nfis for the experience of a night under canvas after witnessing feats of Berber horsemanship and a massive pyrotechnic intro! Read David Kilpatrick’s original report from the Summer 2006 edition of Photoworld magazine.

Click to continue reading “Sony Alpha 100 June 2006 launch report”