After wrting so much about small-sensor cameras vs. full-frame I suddenly realized something about the favorite photographer of mine, Sam Abell: although he is most certainly using full-frame (35 mm film) cameras, it doesn't dominate the look of his images. In fact, they are quite modest in using such "special effects" such as shallow depth of field.
Mostly, he captures what is in front of the camera, and doesn't point to it heavy-handed. In fact, some of his images are so natural that they seem to be taken the first thing after walking out of the door. But that is of course the skill of the artist.
But why then has "bokeh look" become so common in photography? Is it a fashion thing?
Maybe related to this, Paul Lester has got his hands on the Canon S90, an advanced small-sensor camera. He managed to take impressive photographs at first try, even without reading the manual. Which shows that when you have the skills, the camera doesn't matter so much.
As a different kind of example, there was a review of the Samsung EX1/TL500, which had lots of measurements etc., but was somewhat spoiled by the following: "The large front element is protected by a clip-on lens cap, which is a bit of a let-down, being not up to the quality standard set by the camera and, in addition, a nuisance to use. No tether was supplied with the review camera, although the user manual indicates one should come in the box. However, it looks like being quite tricky to fit."
Well, what can you say? I haven't had any trouble with the lens cap of the LX3, but then I have used an SLR previously. And on the Canon Ixus 400 the built-in lens cover got stuck and I didn't manage to get it repaired.
I have seen them. We may go.
3 hours ago
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