Your next real camera should probably be a mirrorless

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Hey folks. Nice to virtually see you all. The title of the article is not meant to be clickbait but if it works as such, I am ok with that. By real camera, I mean a camera with interchangeable lenses and the ability to control the exposure outcome in means beyond simply squeezing the shutter button or tapping the screen. Please don’t send me email or comments explaining how smartphones are real cameras, because however functional and usable they are, they limit your creativity, much like many point and shoot units. Of course creativity is a choice and one can happily go through life without doing anything particularly creative. Your choice and in the phraseology of Minnesota nice “good for you”

Why mirrorless? This is less a question of technology and more a question of economics. The technology is superb. The tools of photography evolve and for those who desire to leverage that evolution while maintaining their artistry, mirrorless technologically makes a lot of sense. No more mirror slap, actual what you see is what you get viewfinders, less guessing and more time afforded for the user to make creative decisions. My first mirrorless was a Lumix a very long time ago and it wasn’t really usable, despite putting out technically acceptable files. My current mirrorless is a Leica M240, not exactly new either and sans the benefits of autofocus and a really good EVF, although I do have an aging Olympus EVF that mounts to the camera. I get a smaller body, lighter weight, smaller lenses, silence and reduced camera shake.

Oh wait…

The initial precepts of mirrorless being smaller and lighter than a traditional DSLR are over. Look at the current crop of full frame mirrorless cameras and they and their lenses have the same weight and girth of their forebears. So why choose mirrorless if the initial promises are now invalid.

It’s the economy photographer.

The photographic industry has been in a downward spiral for years, long before the impact of pandemics. Many people are very happy with smartphones, orders of magnitude more than were happy in the old days of 110 and 126 film cameras. The majority of people have a camera with themselves all the time. The need for a separate pocket camera has been dead so long it has decomposed. So the revenues to the photographic industry whether in hardware or processing has not diminished, it has vanished.

While not yet gone, brick and mortar camera stores are on a greased slide into oblivion. Their only hope was to attract those who want to practice photography not snapshotting (as that is well and truly resolved by smartphones). The way to do so was to have the same price as an online reseller and the same stock levels as the minimum bar and then create value with intelligent and photographically competent staff. In my own studies I can say that the first goal is achieved, not by creativity on the part of the seller but by the introduction of Minimum Advertised Price created by and enforced by manufacturers and distributors. Can you get a better price in a camera store for a product than you can online? Possibly, but you will usually find that discount bound to your additional purchase of high margin stuff that you don’t actually need such as accessories of questionable quality and extended warranties that you will never use.

The second goal, that having inventory on hand is a fail. The more stores a company has, the more dead inventory that they have. Equipment must be on shelves for demonstration purposes and while they will try to fairly sell it as new, most buyers cringe at this even though the odds of getting a return or repack from an online seller are even higher. Manufacturers do not provide demo gear, the store owners much buy it, at considerably reduced margins, and take the hit on it when it finally is sold or sold off on a demo day. Walk into any brick and mortar store trying to survive on 22% margin and you will see less inventory of quality and more inventory of high margin junk.

The third goal of having intelligent photographically adept staff is a non-starter. For minimum wage, you aren’t going to get a lot in the way of competent photographic or video skills. Those folks can make more money with a crappy YouTube channel. Moreover, some chains think that shopping is a social experience and try to convolute buying a camera into a lifecycle model. One can agree or disagree, the numbers speak for themselves., Camera shopping is not a lifecycle thing, without the added value of photographic knowledge behind the counter, there is no value add, no reason to climb into the car, deal with traffic and head into stores, presuming of course that one actually venture into a store.

These economic realities say that there are very people “selling” cameras and most organizations just taking orders for cameras. And that’s why you are going to go mirrorless.

Manufacturers are in trouble. Some are being sold off, some are shutting down their camera divisions, all are being sustained by other more profitable lines where they exist, and some are in pretty dire financial straits.

This means that no company can long afford to maintain two completely distinct lines. The build out of a DSLR and its lenses is a very different build out of a mirrorless and its lenses. One is based firmly in the past and one has an opportunity for the future. If you are the operator of a publicly traded company, responsible for shareholder value, you have only one option. That option is mirrorless.

Consider what companies are still making DSLRs in any kind of volume. The last orgs standing are Nikon and Canon. In the last year, both have released more mirrorless systems than anything else and worked hard (yet delivered poorly) with tools to protect the investment in lenses of their longer term customers. Yes both have released very high end DSLRs this year, very expensive products of excellent capability built to handle sports and high speed action in hostile working environments. Everything else of note is mirrorless. Nikon is already into the second generation of its mirrorless camera line that does full frame, and Canon is finally shipping the second iteration of its R line which is an improvement on the original in a number of ways. We still don’t see a mirrorless under $1000, and the promise of smaller and lighter is now completely dead. When you can build and ship fewer units, your cost per unit is higher, and so is the price, thus the economic factor means prices have gone up for the new products. This makes it harder for more people to engage, and if the numbers tell the truth, more people are caring less about doing photography as a craft anyway. Look to most camera clubs, or photography shows before they died, and you find most users in middle age and greater. While there are some truly talented young creatives out there, very few of them are prepared to or able to tie up thousands of dollars in camera gear.

If you make less money and can make fewer things and your audience is limited to those with some remaining disposable income, you are going to build more expensive mirrorless bodies and lenses. I don’t expect to see an inexpensive Nikon or Canon mirrorless ever. Panasonic appears to be getting out of the business and Olympus has been sold. Sony has been mirrorless for a very long time, but they abandoned the old lineup in a ditch and all their work has been in the a7 family which while excellent is not inexpensive.

The other economic factor to consider is that video has failed to be the future of creative photography. As an educator, camera club operator and moderator for the KelbyOne Community, interest in video is minimal at best. All the time, money and work put into making the latest generation of mirrorless strong video performers has paid back not at all. Serious video is more than just recording. It is rendering, and storage and bandwidth and cooling and unless you go to a pro level dedicated video camera, you get very little in the current crop of mirrorless cameras. And that numerically is probably ok, since the buyers of these cameras don’t care about video anyway.

The conclusion is simple. If you are a still photographer with the desire to pursue photography as a serious hobby or as your craft, your next camera in all probability and best approach will be a mirrorless. And when you do, do not trade the benefit of better quality high ISO performance in exchange for optically slow lenses. A standard lens of f/4-f/7./1 maximum aperture is a slap in the head with a cold dead fish and those who market that as a good solution should be fed to a larger toothier fish.


Do you have an idea for an article, tutorial, video or podcast? Do you have an imaging question unrelated to this article? Send me an email directly at ross@thephotovideoguy.ca or post in the comments.  When you email your questions on any imaging topic, I will try to respond within a day.

If you shop with B&H Photo Video, please consider doing so through the link on thephotovideoguy.ca as this helps support my efforts and has no negative impact whatsoever on your shopping experience. 

If you find the podcast, videos or articles of value, consider clicking the Donation tab in the sidebar of the website and buy me a coffee. Your donation goes to help me keep things going. 

I'm Ross Chevalier, thanks for reading, watching and listening and until next time, peace.


More AI Software, More BS, Further Steps on the Road to Remove Human Creativity

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It’s been a year since my last screed against AI in editing software.

The good news is that it isn’t really Artificial Intelligence because if it were, you’d already have been replaced and the world would not be awash in the volume of dogshit posted to Facebook and Instagram every day. AI does not need humans.

Art, or at least art as we have defined it, still needs humans. Change the definition and change the game of course, but I’m not one of those happy delusional rewriters of history that make up woke and cancel culture may they all rot in hell.

Today, I received a very pleasant message from the people at Skylum software. They make editing tools and some of them are quite good, although I am not personally a user of them. Other folks like them and that is cool. Skylum is very excited about their coming version of Luminar to be called Luminar AI. This places Skylum in the same bucket as a zillion other makers who are tacking AI onto everything to make it sound new, hip and exciting.

Certainly the idea that the software will use more enhanced algorithms to provide corrections to images will sound interesting to non-creatives and they are the likely customer for this stuff because it will help them put more lipstick on more pigs of images. That’s ok too since I do no participate in any social media recognizing it as the great collectivist down-leveller that it is, so I will not have to see the images. I won’t call it work, because there’s no creative work involved.

AI software as it is called is nothing more than a new set of makeup on what we used to call presets. Presets were just someone’s idea of what looked nice and were a quick way to make your images look like theirs. If that sounds like zero creativity, you would be correct. Presets are a panacea to the lazy and inept. I accept that some will say that such a statement is mean and hurtful. In the words of comic Ricky Gervais, whose brilliant evisceration of Hollyweird while hosting some pointless awards show is genius, “I don’t care”

There are people who say that great artists of the past would be all over this software and I do think that if Ansel Adams were alive today, he would leverage tools like Photoshop aggressively. Do I think that he would use presets or AI software? Not on your life! It would ironically amusing to see Adams slap an Ansel Adams preset on an image, but he would not do it. How do I know this?

Because Ansel Adams was an artist. Like Van Gogh, Rodin. Perhaps even like Michelangelo allow there were some payoffs and dispensations from the Catholic Church therein. An artist creates from vision, not from some programmed response. AI does not think, it uses a complex set of deterministic matrices to arrive at a conclusion, yet the conclusions were created by humans. Not individual humans but collectives of humans so as not to have any individualism come through. Creativity is about as individualistic a thing as there is if one is truly creative. If you are copying another’s style as a learning tool go for it. Knowledge is wonderful. If you are doing that so you can represent your work as being equivalent to someone else’s at best you are an idiot and at worst a thief of intellectual property. In either case, I doubt very much that you are still reading this article anyway.

I don’t care.

I’ve also heard it said that these tools help you learn. They teach you how to click a button, not on how to achieve your own style. There’s no actual learning involved. It’s more the grandchild of a Xerox copier. Do you as a creative aspire to be a Xerox copier? If you do, you’re going to love Instagram because it is precisely Same Shit Different Day. You will also love presets and AI editing software and you aren’t reading this anyway.

Here’s an alternative. Go shoot your own images with your own vision and if someone else doesn’t like them they are perfectly free to fuck off on the horse that they rode in on. You don’t need presets and you do not need AI. What you need is that wobbly grey mass sitting inside your skull and a little bit of self-worth.


Do you have an idea for an article, tutorial, video or podcast? Do you have an imaging question unrelated to this article? Send me an email directly at ross@thephotovideoguy.ca or post in the comments.  When you email your questions on any imaging topic, I will try to respond within a day.

If you shop with B&H Photo Video, please consider doing so through the link on thephotovideoguy.ca as this helps support my efforts and has no negative impact whatsoever on your shopping experience. 

If you find the podcast, videos or articles of value, consider clicking the Donation tab in the sidebar of the website and buy me a coffee. Your donation goes to help me keep things going. 

I'm Ross Chevalier, thanks for reading, watching and listening and until next time, peace.

Another Year, Another Opportunity for Creative Growth

Another Year, Another Opportunity for Creative Growth

Yep, the end of another year, and one that I found a bit disappointing photographically. Allow me to explain.

In the different forums, message boards and communities that I support, I found that there was less attention being paid to the photographic creative process, or the video creative process and more time being spent worrying about non-existent gear and a demand to increase volume of lookalike work to get more likes. As an artist, I find this trend both sad and offensive. Let’s start 2020 with some alternative thoughts

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I have to be straight up here. I’m writing about digital noise in photos and I am going to tick off some readers who have different perspectives, some of them finely polished and honed by years of incoming BS. I’m not suggesting that these folks are stupid, but that they may have chosen to believe crap from some alleged experts, or are, to be blunt, doing things incorrectly and building skyscrapers out of tiny bits of Meccano.

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The buzzword in photographic editing is AI or Artificial Intelligence. Sorry mirrorless lovers, Mirrorless is no longer the buzzword of the year. AI sounds all marvellous and such but are these software packages really artificial intelligence, or are they really just a package of more sophisticated algorithms. Or worse, are they encodings of popular looks to be found on Social Media.

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I was asked by a client to write about this topic and thought that it would have even wider resonance because it can be such a great conversation. I have often heard that it’s important to break the rules of photography, but what is consistently left out is that to know when to break the rules, one has to first understand them.  Doing otherwise, is very much putting the cart before the unicorn.

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Run in Circles, Wave Your Hands and Scream!

Recently there has been a flood of information pertaining to Adobe removing their $10 USD per month Photography Plan from sale. As was pointed out in a recent email from Dave Cross, a superb independent Photoshop instructor, it’s an exciting story that just isn’t true. Not right now at least.

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PERSPECTIVES : Does Social Media Help You Become a Better Artist?

PERSPECTIVES : Does Social Media Help You Become a Better Artist?

Welcome to another iteration of Perspectives. I count myself as incredibly fortunate in that I get to meet lots of different creative folks, who are very committed to their craft and growing as creatives. Some of them disconnect because they are not getting traction on social media and that's what I want to talk about today.

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