Ross : Your autumn pictures are just awesome !
especially like the one from 14-24 sigma
Miss my sony stuff sometimes .. I'm more than happy with my Olympus system for what I'm shooting these days
won't get rid of it
but the 100GM macro makes me want it again with a high megapixel camera
and full frame
Ronny Olsson wrote:
Ross : Your autumn pictures are just awesome !
especially like the one from 14-24 sigma
Miss my sony stuff sometimes .. I'm more than happy with my Olympus system for what I'm shooting these days
won't get rid of it
but the 100GM macro makes me want it again with a high megapixel camera
and full frame
Ronny
Thanks Ronny! Man, you are killing it with your gorgeous landscape images!
Ronny Olsson wrote:
Douglas : Your Iceland shots a just awesome !
mine are old and I would have loved to have new ones
How do you experience the difference between the A1 and the A7r V in landscapes?
is there any visible difference?
Ronny
Thank you Ronny!
In the last several years, I have had A7RV+A1, A1+A1, A1+A7RV, A1+A1II, now A1II+A7RV. I don't think anyone can tell the difference of the picture quality between the A1/A1II and the A7RV if taken in the same condition. Compared to the A1 (not A1II), the A7RV has better IBIS and more versatile LCD screen. Obviously, for anything that moves fast, the A1/A1II works better because of the frame rate and blackout free EVF. Once you are used to the blackout free EFV enabled by stacked sensor, it's hard to go back to the "normal" EVF.
For what I shoot, which includes a lot of birds and planes, and some landscape/cityscape, If I could have only one camera, it would easily be the A1 or A1II. If you can have one Sony camera and don't shoot fast subjects much, my pick would be the A7RV. Now the A1 has focus bracketing too but I think the A7RV's is probably better implemented.
Late afternoon at Lingshed in Zanskar. It's at 4000m, and a 5600m peak rises just over a kilometre behind the village and its monastery. (Thypoch 50/1.4, a lovely lens IMO)
This is Kinnaur, a section with one of the less concerning cliff-side roads (tracks, no barriers). You just feel better if the fall is only 50 metres. Some of it was 600 metres above the Sutlej River. No images of that lengthy part, the driver wouldn't stop, and that was for the best.