Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/03/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Sorry to be lurking so long but the Nex-7 is the bee's knees. I've had mine since early February and have used it almost exclusively with M lenses. The trick to using it is to set it to manual focus then select focus peaking in the menu; you can select red, blue or yellow. What this does is outline what is in focus with the chosen color. Other choices are to select which dial to use to set up ISO(I've chosen the rear ring), which to set exposure compensation(I've chosen the upper right dial) leaving the upper left dial to control flash compensation. The advantages are that you can see what is in focus but also a good idea of what the depth of field will be. The viewfinder also gains up so you an effectively focus at F11 in a dim room. It also takes into account focus shift which is being discussed in relation to the 75 lux or the Noctilux. So, setting the viewfinder to display information you can take an image then see it replay immediately and change settings on the fly while recomposing. Once you have what you want you can go back to a clean viewfinder and shoot M style. Turning off replay lets you shoot at truly stupidly fast speeds. Oh, and you can set rear curtain only shutter which gets shutter lag down to M3 immediacy. Downsides would be an antialiasing filter which does diminish image detail and at ISO's over 3200 noise in the shadows becomes something you need to deal with. The APS-C sensor also makes wide angle shooting better left to an M9; here I'm talking about 12's to 18's. You might say I'm a fan. Now back to lurking. On Sun, Mar 18, 2012 at 11:31 PM, Adam Bridge <abridge at mac.com> wrote: > Here's a link to three NEX-7 images I shot this afternoon, hand held, > using the 55-210 kit lens. I also have the 18-55 lens. > > < > http://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/gallery/22003432_Lz2PWj#!i=1755286152&k=zWCpt5c > > > > These cameras take a while to learn, unlike the M8 which I felt > comfortable with right away. There are about a zillion different menus and > settings, there are controls that work like nothing else on the planet. > It's a good thing I was shooting in RAW because I managed to offer the > exposure by a stop (I don't know how). > > I was trying to learn the nifty focus mode that Sony has built into the > NEX-7 where if you start to manually focus the camera will do a 3x or 10x > (user selectable of course) to the focus point to allow for fine-focus. > Good thing too, in my brief experience. The focus is close, but almost > never exactly what I'm looking for. > > What's nice about this mode is its ability to work with my Leica lenses. I > have a Novaflex adaptor so can mount my Leica M lenses and I have an R > adaptor coming so I can use the 100mm APO. > > The adaptor makes the camera a bit bulkier than I had thought it would be. > I'll take some images of it compared to the M8 and Panasonic GF-1 this > week. Still, it's a very pleasant camera. > > I LOVE the OLED eye-level viewfinder. It's terrific > > I'll answer questions and most more images as I get experience. > > Except for the learning curve, damn, I guess I'm getting old, I'm liking > this camera. > > And I've only shot 20 seconds of video of my feet and the back end of > Fia-dog by accident. Rolling my eyes. > > Adam > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information > -- Don don.dory at gmail.com