M. McDonald
- Comment
Ive been a small time semi-pro since the early 90s. Although I will never pass up a chance to take a picture at anytime of anything or anyone that might create a beautiful image, my passion centers around outdoor photography when I travel. As I imagine, anyone with internet access can view and read everyones opinion and take of the G12 - every button, mode, and nuance has been examined like an alien from Area 51. With that I will give you my personal take from my perspective. The last seven years has seen my bank account quite lean so my instrument purchases have had to be well thought out and planned. I would say my "photography personality type" would be someone that will agonize over every technical capability and detail of a camera or accessory before a purchase, but after, resolves to the skill of artist to create beautiful and captivating images. That new camera will not improve your images. That new camera may increase your chances of getting the image youre envisioning, but without envisioning, the only thing that will change is your bank account. Although I had "fiddled" with this camera for weeks, my first real impression of this camera was when I went to my youngest daughters ballet dress rehearsal. This is far better than trying to get great shots of your kid at the final event (theres not as many people there, the stage and lighting most likely will be the same, and there is usually do overs for you to capitalize on). The ease at which I was able to manipulate this camera on the fly was remarkable and far and above any camera I have used to date. The array of dials, on top, in back, and in front give me the control I want at an instant. Rarely did I have to dip into depths of electronic menus to tweak what I wanted. Any camera I purchase from here out will be compared with what I have in the G12. And this from a person who really never considered this quality in a camera before this purchase. If you end up getting this camera and find yourself dissatisfied with the image quality I will confidently put you in a particular category. That category which a person spends far too much time inspecting their images on a computer screen at an enlargement size nobody would really consider printing unless they produced billboards. I have an expanse of cameras to fit different types of situations but the G12 fits a niche that cant be satisfied by anything I have to date. I wanted a camera (and its accompanying system) that I could simply "grab a small bag" and have everything I needed for a weekend trip to the coast, two weeks in Hawaii, or a month in India. And believe that if I nabbed that once in a lifetime shot, I would not forever bemoan the final print for lack of image quality, key filter, or perfect lens. I have a Domke bag (700-51B F-5XA) that is roughly the size of a Scooby-Doo lunch pale from the 70s. In it I have everything I need: every filter I can imagine needing (seven in total) all in a stack cap filter case; three batteries and the AC charger; macro ring flash; wide lens converter along with the adapter to mount it; lens shade; Gorillapod; LensMate filter/lens adapter; intervalometer (which also doubles as a remote shutter release); hand strap; and a white balance lens cap. I also have a small camera case that will sometimes go with me that is about the size of a Pop Tarts box. Must have features that led me to pick this camera and system: optical viewfinder - despite reviews I have read, this viewfinder is every bit as good as ANY viewfinder from a camera of this size that I have used in the last thirty-five years of playing with cameras - also a necessary component for discreet shooting, bright day shooting, and steady hand-held shooting; fully articulating screen - makes overhead, waist level and floor shooting easier and/or possible - also flips about to conceal/protect the LCD screen which adds protection and another valuable component of discreet shooting; tried and true and ever-tweaked (over the years) optical stabilization; hot shoe for external flash; size - small enough to be considered a compact - a camera and its system being any bigger would be subject to me opting to leave it home because I dont want to haul all that equipment around; price - this is a very important consideration but not for what you may think - when traveling, I dont want to consider the total price of the "bag of tools" so expensive that I leave it behind for fear of being stolen or broken - all in all have the camera with me more often means more pictures and a better chance of being equipped when that "great shot" presents itself.