I recently purchased a Fujifilm X100VI, it is my first compact camera ever because I only owned a SONY A7IV. I can say that the power of Fujifilm lies in the ''Shot out of the camera'' experience, so the whole process happens and ends during the shooting phase, and by managing to shoot with a ''FILM LUT'' applied, you instantly enter in that mood. I'm sure that shooting in this way is an excellent way to improve artistically and concentrate more when shooting and less when editing, a bit like we did in the past. The same goes for other compact cameras obviously, like the RICOH GR which attracts me a lot due to its compactness. The Fuji is very small, but it is not a pocket camera. I would like to test it, the HDF model attracts me, but the image paste and the predisposition to the Fuji film style with the simulations and the customization of the simulations (Kodak Portra, Cinestill etc) pushed me to take Fuji. Only now do I understand why the 35 2.8 on the Sony was a game changer for you. It is possible to transform the Sony into a camera that is a little bigger than the Fujifilm, and with abnormal qualities. It's a shame Sony doesn't offer the same approach in simulations (I always shoot in RAW, but now I'm finding it very fun to shoot in simulation without subsequent editing) excluding black and white which is excellent.
Great video! Could you do an updated night settings one as well? Would particularly love to know how you deal with shooting people/faces in darker settings, vs the kind of landscape street scenes in your previous night video! Thanks again for all the great tips!
I particularly like what you say in this video and I think I will try your suggestions now I have my GR IIIx (for a few days only) to see how they fit my style. I watched Sean Tucker's video about daylight white balance a few days earlier and the idea intrigued me then. Now you have talked about this too It was the first setting I changed on my new camera.
I just got a X100VI and honestly I am a bit disappointed in the image quality compared to my Ricoh GRIII. F2 and sometimes even F2.8 is too soft. Also gives weird artifacts in the background.
I think this is what a lot of people miss when comparing x100 series to GRIII/x. The GR series has unbelievably sharp corner to corner images for being an ultra-compact APS-C camera. Once you shoot with it and get used to snap focus, you can't go back, at least for street photography.
I recently purchased a Fujifilm X100VI, it is my first compact camera ever because I only owned a SONY A7IV. I can say that the power of Fujifilm lies in the ''Shot out of the camera'' experience, so the whole process happens and ends during the shooting phase, and by managing to shoot with a ''FILM LUT'' applied, you instantly enter in that mood. I'm sure that shooting in this way is an excellent way to improve artistically and concentrate more when shooting and less when editing, a bit like we did in the past.
The same goes for other compact cameras obviously, like the RICOH GR which attracts me a lot due to its compactness. The Fuji is very small, but it is not a pocket camera. I would like to test it, the HDF model attracts me, but the image paste and the predisposition to the Fuji film style with the simulations and the customization of the simulations (Kodak Portra, Cinestill etc) pushed me to take Fuji.
Only now do I understand why the 35 2.8 on the Sony was a game changer for you. It is possible to transform the Sony into a camera that is a little bigger than the Fujifilm, and with abnormal qualities. It's a shame Sony doesn't offer the same approach in simulations (I always shoot in RAW, but now I'm finding it very fun to shoot in simulation without subsequent editing) excluding black and white which is excellent.
Great video!
Could you do an updated night settings one as well? Would particularly love to know how you deal with shooting people/faces in darker settings, vs the kind of landscape street scenes in your previous night video!
Thanks again for all the great tips!
Glad you mentioned Sean. Both of you have inspired me to start my street photography journey
Great to hear! So much good wisdom on his channel 👍🏻
I particularly like what you say in this video and I think I will try your suggestions now I have my GR IIIx (for a few days only) to see how they fit my style. I watched Sean Tucker's video about daylight white balance a few days earlier and the idea intrigued me then. Now you have talked about this too It was the first setting I changed on my new camera.
Thanks for all the effort you put into your videos! Always very helpful!
Glad you like them!
Love that you've used a takeout chopstick as a handle for the mic XD
Easy, free and does the job perfectly 😂
Always a pleasure. 👌🏼
Was literally in the same spot in Hiroshima (3:16) shooting with your preset, a couple months ago in Jan!
Adrien you are a very Nice creator
can i get the link on the white balance video mentioned?
Wow! This is photos from camera or edited? Thx 😃
everything edited with my presets ;)
Thanks for this
My pleasure!
i have some trouble in my health and it is no possible to cary a heavy camera...
so i im discover this mervellous camera the Ricoh GR
Hola amigo, que piensas tu de las edicion de fotos estilo cinematografíco?
Typically how long does it take for you to edit/post process 1 photo ?
It can vary but between 1 and 5 min I would say
Where do you set your gopro? on the top of your camera¿
I hold in my hand when doing these composition breakdown
Great video - too the point title as well! :)
Thanks!
Glitch in the matrix 12:49
I just got a X100VI and honestly I am a bit disappointed in the image quality compared to my Ricoh GRIII. F2 and sometimes even F2.8 is too soft. Also gives weird artifacts in the background.
I think this is what a lot of people miss when comparing x100 series to GRIII/x. The GR series has unbelievably sharp corner to corner images for being an ultra-compact APS-C camera. Once you shoot with it and get used to snap focus, you can't go back, at least for street photography.
cant find the link abt white balance
ua-cam.com/video/eQPPa_8Z13o/v-deo.html
is the above video?
Vous parlez beaucoup trop vite pour que les non parfaits anglophones vous comprennent
On ne peut même pas suivre les sous titres 😀
you can tap on the 'setting's wheel and choose a slower speed if you want...