The longer I own my DSLR, the less important it becomes, and the more important it is to focus on the pictures rather than the gear. However, Canon’s annual DSLR presentation was due, and so I had a peek on their new release: The EOS 7D, placed between the prosumer x0D-line (10D and up) and the professional 5D. What’s technically interesting me are
- 8 fps continuous shooting with a burst of 126 JPEGs or 15 RAWs
- 19-point AF with new modes
- Viewfinder with 1.0× magnification, 100% coverage and LCD overlay
- iFCL metering system that respects color
- HD-movie mode
- Dual 14-bit DIGIC 4 processing
It’s probably targeted against (the successor of) Nikon’s D300 that’s placed between their D90 and D700. While the D90 could be compared to the Canon 50D and the D700 to the Canon 5D, Canon lacked something in between so far.
The current hype to include a movie mode into DSLRs isn’t quite comprehensible to me. Maybe time will show whether video photography will become a style of its own. It appears to me that video capability and operability are rather limited, although the ability to choose between lenses is a big advantage. I’ll rather go for a dedicated camcorder nonetheless.
Regarding the pictures: While it’s still okay for me to be involved in casual techie debates (e.g. about astro photography), they become less interesting when it’s just about cameras. Only the output matters, so I don’t feel an urge to follow current developments in that detail. Unfortunately, I didn’t find the time to go out shooting as much as I had wished, due to priority reasons. However, my next main genre will apparently be child photography in great profusion.
While I’m at it, I was struggling a lot what tele lens I’d finally buy, thinking of getting things closer “out there”. Although Canon’s EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6 [review] has a disputed design and is more than 10 years old, Sigma’s recently introduced 120-400mm and 150-500mm lenses can’t outperform it. So it’ll probably join my gear in a few months. I also had tested Zeiss’ ZE Planar T* 50mm f/1.4, but I’m not sure whether I’d use such a lens often. Maybe Canon’s cheap EF 50mm f/1.8 II might be an option.