| > Why should _I_ do that instead of the camera? First, every machine has its limits, second every photographer has a style. > You shouldn't. The camera should. No. The camera should do exactly as I say. It's an instrument, which shall allow footguns. Because one person's footgun is other person's style. Camera should be a blunt instrument, and should completely get out of the photographer's way, shall become transparent. It's not the camera's interpretation of the scene. It's the photographer's interpretation through the camera. > ...offer the HDR version. If you feel lazy, many mirrorless cameras do that, but the results are may not fit your taste. Sony A7III's Auto-HDR is nice, but it's not exactly what I want, so I merge mine manually. > You know, the thing that phone cameras have been doing for a decade or so. I have quite a few cameras: A Canonette 28, a Pentax MZ50, a Nikon D70s and a Sony A7-III. I also used Canon AE-1, etc. All of these cameras have metering, and all of them are excellent for their era. They are not infallible or perfect. For example, D70s freaks out in CFL and LED environments, because these indoor lighting was non-existent when it was designed. So a custom WB is a must in this case. A7-III sometimes struggles in colored LED (sodium yellow-ish) environments, so you again set custom WB. That machine was the most accurate camera in terms of color when it came out. As I said, every machine has its limits. > However, the same software can do so much more when coupled with a big sensor and a good optical system. The thing is, photographer's don't want the software. They want what they exactly see recorded in a file, and that's more of a dynamic range thing more than a color thing, and it's directly related to sensor hardware (regardless of its size), not software. From my understanding, you want a mirrorless (or full frame) point and shoot, and that's OK. What I want is total control over the camera hardware, regardless of its form factor. |
This is such a bullshit statement...
> No. The camera should do exactly as I say.
Well, time to throw your camera away, I guess. Unless you have a very old DSLR camera, of course.
> It's not the camera's interpretation of the scene. It's the photographer's interpretation through the camera.
The thing is, the camera can take multiple exposures at no cost, and then you can just discard the ones that you don't need. So you basically want to artificially limit the software and hardware to simulate the old-timey workflows.
> For example, D70s freaks out in CFL and LED environments, because these indoor lighting was non-existent when it was designed.
See: smartphones.
> The thing is, photographer's don't want the software.
This photographer wants it. And the market has clearly spoken in agreement with me.
> From my understanding, you want a mirrorless (or full frame) point and shoot, and that's OK.
Pretty much.