What's So Special About CCD Colors?

There has been a lot of discussion about CCD vs CMOS, and how CCC has some magic in their color rendering. I do own some older CCD image sensor cameras, the Olympus E-1, Nikon D50, Olympus XZ-1 to name a few. I explore the CCD colors, are they really that special in this video.
PayPal www.paypal.me/robinwongphoto
Buy Me Coffee www.buymeacoffee.com/robinwong
Amazon www.amazon.com/?&_encoding=UT...
B&H www.bhphotovideo.com/?BI=19301...
Adorama adorama.rfvk.net/5bjPvD
My Photo & Video Gear kit.co/robinwong
0:00 Intro
0:25 Why Old Cameras?
2:47 Olympus E-1 Images
3:26 Accurate vs Pleasing Colors?
6:28 Nikon D50 Images
7:09 CCD vs CMOS Sensors
8:52 CMOS Colors
10:32 Other Camera Colors
11:52 Olympus XZ-1 Colors
12:33 Conclusions/END
Follow me on:
Instagram: / shutter.therapy
Facebook Page: / shuttertherapy
Blog: robinwong.blogspot.com
My Photo & Video Gear kit.co/robinwong
Music in video:
Traveller by Atch
SoundCloud: / atch-music
Instagram: / atchmusic
Download: bit.ly/2yGxrT8

Пікірлер: 366

  • @extrajava9175
    @extrajava91756 ай бұрын

    Robin, your use of color in composition is masterful. I think that's a much bigger reason why your pictures are so vibrant than the fact you shot with a CCD camera.

  • @AnthonyJGianotti
    @AnthonyJGianotti10 ай бұрын

    People conflate dynamic range and saturation with “better colors”. What they like about ccd sensors is the saturation values of reds, greens and blues they were coded with and the lack of dynamic range creating stark contrast and the perception of even more saturated colors. The one thing I would say is a true benefit of ccd is the representation of noise. The Bayer array on cmos sensors makes noise look more “digital” as color is simulated via an algorithm causing a blocky noise pattern that is not the most pleasing to look at.

  • @chrischoy9

    @chrischoy9

    4 ай бұрын

    People seem to be on a nostalgia trip. It's low contrast, creamy and warm looking compared to CMOS which is rather clinical aka close to life.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    CCDs have the same Bayer array filter, the only difference between CCDs and CMOSs lies in the micro lenses in front of the photosites/photodiodes. It is true that the treatment of noise used to be smoother in CCDs than in CMOSs, not necessarily the case anymore due to the tremendous research efforts invested in CMOS and the fact that the information is processed at pixel level in real time and that that technology as also tremendously improved ("back-lit" CMOS for instance, and processing software).

  • @jasonhubbard5422
    @jasonhubbard5422 Жыл бұрын

    I recently bought a Nikon D50 due to seeing many videos about this CCD thing. I normally shoot with vintage lenses on my Sony mirrorless and love it. After seeing only a handful of pictures from the D50 (luckily I still had my 35, 40 and 50 primes from my D7000)....I was blown away. So I bought a D70 for the faster shutter speed and extra dial, the D40 for compactness, and the D200 (just received) for the extra MP and legendary status. I told my wife I was done buying after she counted my 100 vintage lenses ...so now I'm sneaking in to the house my Nikon cameras 😂. And now after just telling her I have all the CDD Nikons on my list ...I bought for $8 a Minolta Dimage 7 CCD 5MP camera because it can be used as Infrared without modification....😂

  • @kingloo6407

    @kingloo6407

    Жыл бұрын

    Same issue here

  • @johnyoung1606

    @johnyoung1606

    Жыл бұрын

    I would really like to have a camera that can shoot "Infrared Photos" !!! I wonder what You do to make it shoot "IR PIX"???? ThankYou in advance :) :)

  • @jasonhubbard5422

    @jasonhubbard5422

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnyoung1606 just Google Minolta Dimage 7 Infrared and you will see some old posts about it. You just need that camera and IR filter.

  • @Badgerheist

    @Badgerheist

    Жыл бұрын

    Only 100? I wish I had your level of self control :)

  • @marxiewasalittlegirl

    @marxiewasalittlegirl

    Жыл бұрын

    Well that's informative

  • @55whiplash
    @55whiplash Жыл бұрын

    You aren't the only person to love the old Canon 5D color renditions. I also hear the Nikon D700 is mentioned as having a unique quality. I do enjoy my old D80, and I still shoot it a lot. I recently got one of my favorite images with it. It was very overcast and a 1950's ere pickup truck just came out amazing. The local color in your photo's makes me want to visit your beautiful country some day. Thanks for all your hard work.

  • @lukas_06_photo83
    @lukas_06_photo83 Жыл бұрын

    I just wanted to thank you for your amazing videos. You really inspired me to go outside and take some beautiful photos. I love the motivation you put into your videos.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Lukas, appreciate that. Let's all go out and shoot more photos!

  • @bonjovi1612
    @bonjovi16125 ай бұрын

    Hi Robin, can I just say, thanks, thanks for your honesty, that really helps me to make my own informed choices.

  • @amermeleitor
    @amermeleitor Жыл бұрын

    About color, i watched an interview with a colorist that said Hasselblad colors are the most accurate ones, then was Fuji (plain color without simulations) and Nikon. But he said no camera have perfect color, Sony put grey in skies and mess the skin in different ways, Nikon mess the greens and put cyan in skies, Canon put magenta all over the place (that he said is very difficult to correct), etc.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    That is true, there is no camera with perfect colors. Each has some compromises. We pick and choose what works best for us.

  • @AriusNowak
    @AriusNowak8 ай бұрын

    CCD sensors are passives, as film negatives are. They base on electron (fotons) stream force to give pics - electron sensors. CMOS sensors active are, they are electronic sensors which base is scanning system as in old tv tubes + noise dumping system.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    Total babble, no scientific data to back this up (except that CCDs and CMOS process their information (electron/electricity) differently and not their Photons (from photo = light in Greek)

  • @johncl27
    @johncl27 Жыл бұрын

    my first DSLR was an Olympus E500 I bought around 2007...8 megapixel, no live view, slow as a wet week to buffer photos shot in RAW format but I do still love the colours and was always trying to emulate them in post with images from my Canon 60D that replaced the Olympus to no avail. I still have it...along with a Canon 6Dmkii and a Fuji XS-10...and I still love shooting with it at times for the colours/contrast ratios and that something special about the look.

  • @Olgersdr
    @Olgersdr Жыл бұрын

    Always pleased to see your videos Robin. My first camera was an Olympus E-420 with a 10MP CMOS sensor. Despite having a Pentax K3 mk.III as my main camera, i still take that Olympus around with the Olympus 25mm f2.8 Pancake lens, because i love those colours.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Olympus color science has always been solid since the beginning. Hence I rely on them for my work!

  • @liamsmith4625
    @liamsmith46257 ай бұрын

    Hi Robin. Love your explanations and outlook. Very unpretentious. I am long term user of Olympus and Lumix. Loved this piece about CMOS v cc'd. Have no opinion either way. Whatever does it for you is good. Thanks!

  • @amermeleitor
    @amermeleitor Жыл бұрын

    At the beginning of the CMOS era, there was some drawbacks in CMOS technology compared to CCD. But CMOS was cheaper and consumes less energy, so that both advantages were the reason why industry put money in develop better and better CMOS sensors. An advantage of CCD up today is that even a cheaper CCD is a global shutter one, even in point and shoot cameras. I would love a CCD full frame sensor with today technology.

  • @Lauren_C

    @Lauren_C

    Жыл бұрын

    Global shutter CMOS sensors do exist, so if a manufacturer cared to (there are some Black Magic cameras that do this), CCDs don’t even have that advantage.

  • @amermeleitor

    @amermeleitor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Lauren_C Global shutter CMOS sensors are very expensive. Global shutter CCD sensor are cheap, just because all CCD sensors are global shutter.

  • @Lauren_C

    @Lauren_C

    Жыл бұрын

    @@amermeleitor don’t think it’s cost alone. The Black Magic Ursa 4K had global shutter, and was certainly far less expensive, than the RED and ARRI cameras of the time (2013) which lacked global shutter. Considering that both ARRI and RED still choose not to use global shutter, indicates other tradeoffs.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    I think global shutter is not that simple to execute. While the older CCD may have global shutter, they also have other issues that come with it, and it as been proven that CMOS is superior and more "future-proof".

  • @amermeleitor

    @amermeleitor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robinwong yes, even Sony (the biggest sensor maker) uses CMOS for its global shutter industrial line, but others makers continue with CCD up today. And as far as I know the Digital Bolex 16 uses a CCD sensor with somewhat "modern" capabilities.

  • @numbersix8919
    @numbersix8919 Жыл бұрын

    Such a big and complex subject! I have all these CCD pocket cameras, and I just love the different ways they reproduce colors. They may nor be technically perfect, but I don't think people see the way cameras do anyway. In fact, cameras are nowhere near being able to see as well as humans do. All I can say is that the colors never look "flat" and they are very easy to absorb. Thanks to Robin, I will be getting a 5D Classic for sure, this video decided me!!!!

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Give the Canon 5D a try! The white balance engine may be too warm in some situations, if you shoot RAW, a bit of slider adjustment goes a long way.

  • @numbersix8919

    @numbersix8919

    Жыл бұрын

    @robinwong Thanks, Robin. I wonder what Olympus cameras tend to need most often in post-processing? (Hint, hint...)

  • @SMGJohn

    @SMGJohn

    Жыл бұрын

    Human eye is actually extremely imperfect, its only got a small centre of its vision thats "high spatial resolution" everything outside this very small cone falls off dramatically and becomes very blurry. Not to mention our colour vision is non existent, yes our eyes cannot differentiate colour at all, its the brain that does insane amount of computational power to turn the extremely lackluster vision of ours into the things we see, colours included. Cameras need filters to filter out colours in order to distinguish red green and blue or some cameras do CMY others have extra green filters and likes of Foveon have complete filter coverage for each channel. My point is, using our eyes as an argument for cameras to go by is like using a Google Pixel phone and stating it takes good pictures, but its not the camera that does the good pictures its literally all the AI stuff they crammed in there, the Google Pixel is the closest representation to our eyes, but a camera has to literally see everything instantly and perfectly, the processor only puts the various data together and combines it, thats it, nothing more, maybe a bit of noise reduction as the signals go through various channels, our eyes also have horrid low light performance with equivalent ISO of like 1 million and yet still cannot see jack piss.

  • @numbersix8919

    @numbersix8919

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SMGJohn Well if you want to say the human visual system is responsible for the way we see, that's fine. That's what I call the human eye. No artificial system can detect and reproduce what the human eye sees. For me this is most evident with dynamic range: 21 stops. That is the eye proper. But the resolution of the visual medium (not the retina, or the visual cortex) is estimated at about 130 MP. About not having infrared vision, you are quite right, humans can't see well in the dark, although there is a dark vision mode that can work well enough with some special techniques and practice. Some people have better night vision than others. Night vision hasn't been critical for survival for a very long time, perhaps around 100,000 generations. What night vision camera do you use?

  • @artsilva
    @artsilva Жыл бұрын

    I've been shooting Nikon since the late seventies so my experience in color comparisons and rendering in digital is vast. Having said that I still have my D100 and D200, both 6 and 10Mp CCDs respectively. I now shoot with the D850 (BSI CMOS) and the Z5 (Non-BSI CMOS) and I have to say that at least with Nikon, they have stayed consistent with their native RAW colors, very true to life in my personal experience. What CCD differs I think is in its rendering or look. To me the CCD is the closest you can get to modern film look with it's grain and color & focus transitions. Black and White images has a certain "emulsion" look to them that I don't see much in CMOS unless I try to process in post, maybe the difference in Mps or pixel pitch has something to do with it because my Fuji X-E1 and X-E2 both with 16Mp CMOS come very close to what I see in my old Nikon CCDs. By the way; the reason the industry went to CMOS is Not "better" technology, initially, it's because CCDs were expensive to make and CMOS were much cheaper tech and design to manufacture. Who know if Live View and better AF would have made it to CCDs if we stuck with them, but I guess we'll never know.

  • @kevinurben6005

    @kevinurben6005

    11 ай бұрын

    Compact CCD cameras all had live view.

  • @artsilva

    @artsilva

    11 ай бұрын

    @@kevinurben6005 Yes because they were essentially fixed lens mirrorless with or without a viewfinder, only an LCD to see what you're shooting

  • @artsilva

    @artsilva

    10 ай бұрын

    @@S7RING3R what? where did you hear that.

  • @AriusNowak

    @AriusNowak

    8 ай бұрын

    CCD sensors are passives, as film negatives are. They base on electron (fotons) stream force to give pics - electron sensors. CMOS sensors active are, they are electronic sensors which base is scanning system as in old tv tubes + noise dumping system.

  • @serafin2024

    @serafin2024

    5 ай бұрын

    Sony made DSLR with CCD sensor and live view and flip screen. Models are sony alpha 300, 350. They have 2 sensors, one for capturibg photo 1 for live view. Also sony made CCDs for Nikon, so they just made sensors by themselves and put in camera, dont have to search for manufacturer. I also like colours from CCD sensor, more than CMOS. My first try was with Nikon coolpix 4600.

  • @williammoskovitz7772
    @williammoskovitz7772 Жыл бұрын

    I have a 2006 Kodak Z650 point and shoot camera. It does in fact have a CCD sensor. This little 6mp camera takes excellent pictures even compared with my modern Olympus mirrorless cameras. ( EM10 MarkII and EM1 MarkII). It has surprisingly good color rendition !!!

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Kodak is another company that knows color very well. Too bad they went out of business too soon.

  • @SianaGearz

    @SianaGearz

    8 ай бұрын

    @@robinwong I tried several Kodak digital cameras around 1996-1997 when i worked as a benchmarking technician and editor for a computer magazine and saw no evidence of them knowing anything about colour, the pictures were absolutely hideous even by the standards of the day. I think they had to learn it - their chemistry people can do colour, but this wouldn't trivially translate into the company being serious about it in their other endeavours. After reputation murdering moves like that (even if they did do better eventually), and various successful attempts at self-sabotage, whose fault is it really that they had to give up?

  • @SianaGearz

    @SianaGearz

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Koji-888 No, i didn't make a blanket statement about all Kodak cameras. The cameras i had in my hands in that era were the ones that were sold in the stores at the time, Kodak DC20 and DC120 if i remember right, sub $1000 cameras. Both were made by Chinon and both were based on cheap camcorder CCDs from what people figured out later. This whole endeavour with Chinon cameras for sure left a sour taste in the mouth of every person who touched these units and ruined the brand reputation for this business area. Once you have that sort of issue, some companies recover and others do not, and JUST doing good products is often not enough, especially if they don't start being CONSISTENTLY good and also special enough somehow or at least aggressively enough priced to get them in the hands of people. I'm saying Kodak has set themselves up for failure by shipping crap with their branding on it in mid late 90s, into the market area with a lot of volume and visibility, they're themselves to blame for the eventual failure of their DSC business. Not because all their products were bad. But even try to name a really bad Fujifilm, Canon, Casio, SONY, Olympus or even Sanyo. Just try.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    That may rely more on the way the JPG are processed (Kodak profile vs Olympus profile).

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    @@Koji-888 + Kodak numerous DSLRs (the last ones being the DCS 14n and 14c), and the Leica M9.

  • @alantuttphotography
    @alantuttphotography Жыл бұрын

    I definitely agree that accuracy of colors must come first, then artistic interpretation of those colors if desired. I know a number of women who spent DAYS picking out the perfect shade of color for their bridesmaid dresses, and they would have been horrified if the photos came back with those colors altered. And yes, brand colors are also highly scrutinized for accuracy.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    You are right. I have brides telling me they want the colors to match real life as closely as possible.

  • @marlenestemme1599
    @marlenestemme1599 Жыл бұрын

    I think color accuracy vs. aesthetic appeal depends entirely on the purpose and situation. Photographing for a client, whether wedding, product photography, etc., is hands down about color accuracy and reproducing reality. Aesthetically pleasing colors (and shadow quality, etc.) come into play when representing a more subjective experience, maybe more in art photography or for hobby use. I've used multiple cameras over almost 20 years of taking concert photos. I've seen professional photos of those same shows that are far superior in technical quality, but they have the look of "that happened." My favorites of my own photos have the look of "I know what it was like to be there." The photos that most give that quality are from cameras from the golden age of the CCD era, ~2005-2009 in the case of my cameras. I've taken photos since then that have more detail, far better low-light tolerance, require less correction, but editing them is a technical pursuit, not an artsy enjoyment.

  • @tobinthomas-sg5ix

    @tobinthomas-sg5ix

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah, also I didn't agree with the statement that it's the job of the camera to be accurate. Depends on what you're trying to do with your photography. Also post processing is entirely unenjoyable for me

  • @TreDeuce-qw3kv

    @TreDeuce-qw3kv

    9 ай бұрын

    I see a difference between some CCD's and most CMOS. I prefer CCD for Abstract Street shooting. I have fun on both ends, the shoot and the process at which I can lose my sense of time doing and find that the sun is about to come up.

  • @harrison00xXx

    @harrison00xXx

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@TreDeuce-qw3kv CCDs shine the most in artificial light, for example well lit cities at night (where older CCDs are still good enough), neon lights mainly. Also, at least thats my experience with 2004/2005 Sony CCD cameras, they perform great with vibrant colors in nature, such as flowers and greenery in general. What i really like the most about my CCD cameras... out of the box you dont need too much post processing, beside the fact that i barerly can stretch my 5,1 and 7,2MP photos at all.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@tobinthomas-sg5ix Being accurate is the most difficult job of any film or sensor. It can always be modified (JPG profile or image processor on computer) to please your colour biases or intentions. The reverse operation is extremely tricky and almost impossible.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    @@TreDeuce-qw3kv If you look at the JPG straight from the camera and whose profile has not be modified, maybe although I would interested for the results of a test (especially in "abstract street photography" (which by the way almost sounds like an oxymoron ;o).

  • @eimhin_
    @eimhin_8 ай бұрын

    You have a really great energy in front of the camera, Robin!

  • @alexdarklord666
    @alexdarklord666 Жыл бұрын

    I liked your video a lot. I still find satisfaction when using my Nikon D3000 that I purchased in 2010. Apparently I am faithful to it and when battery died last year I decided to get a new battery and keep the camera.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah just get the new battery, the camera is still awesome!

  • @adrianangyal6008
    @adrianangyal6008 Жыл бұрын

    Wow, I can't agree more, you are absolutely right. 5d classic, full stop. I already know your channel and I know that you're a m43 shooter and I can tell you I was super surprised by the Canon 5d classic. Actually I shot Canon for assignments (owned a huge number of canons, but also bought the 5dc because of nostalgia) and recently bought 2nd hand m43 camera + couple of lenses (BTW thanks to you I picked up a Pana 20mm 1.7 I for street photography, thank you, well spent money). Keep up good work :)

  • @Lordvader330
    @Lordvader330 Жыл бұрын

    You are dead on with this one Robin. I still shoot my e-5 and e-510 all the time. These old Kodak sensors are amazing. Love these vintage videos. Now if we can get you to shoot some MANUAL vintage OM lenses that would be fun.

  • @neilcousineau4956

    @neilcousineau4956

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I use my old OM lens occasionally, lots of soft - slightly out of focus photos :) but also lots of fun, epically when we get focus right.

  • @AriusNowak

    @AriusNowak

    Жыл бұрын

    Kodak KAF sensors are only in: E1, E300, E500, E400 cameras. X.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    No AF no go for Robin. Sorry!

  • @davidmantripp5312

    @davidmantripp5312

    Жыл бұрын

    Neither E5 nor E510 has a Kodak sensor. The last Olympus DSLR to have a Kodak sensor was the E-400.

  • @gustavohartel5159
    @gustavohartel5159 Жыл бұрын

    Again! Great point! I have yet my e 3 and the e620 , what great cameras! Still using it!

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Both are awesome cameras

  • @scrptwic
    @scrptwic Жыл бұрын

    Robin I Bought my Pentax *istDL in 2005 and my Pentax K100D in 2006 both are 6 megapixel CCD sensor cameras that I stil use I like the way the colors pop with modern photo editing software especially my pictures of fall foliage in New England.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Old cameras are great cameras

  • @kennygo8300
    @kennygo8300 Жыл бұрын

    Some models in a camera lineup will "seemingly" excel at color science. I shoot Nikon, and that's why I haven't sold my old D300 and D700 cameras. I really like the way they render skin tones, so I'll dig them out to shoot portraits. Not sure if anyone else notices it, but it does matter to me.

  • @christinecoughlan4699
    @christinecoughlan4699 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Robin .

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Cheers Christine.

  • @sbcwinn
    @sbcwinn8 ай бұрын

    I, like you, am into collecting older cameras. BTW - older Olympus cameras are my favorites to collect! I have never found anything special about CCD sensors. In my opinion, I get better results from CMOS sensors which I find more accurate. I also find that Pentax cameras produce super results. I have a k-5 and a k-50. But in general, as for faithful results, Olympus color science cannot be beat! Thanks for your videos. I enjoy them.

  • @danny_r27
    @danny_r27 Жыл бұрын

    My Olympus E-300, Canon Powershot G9, and Kodak ZD710 have amazing colors and the only one of my cameras that beats them in color science is my Leica M10. I plan on getting another Canon Powershot G9 soon as a backup to my current one just in case anything happens to it because that’s the camera that’s always with me because how pocketable it is and has a zoom range of 35-200mm full frame equivalent. CCD sensors seem to portray true to life colors and that’s what seems to make them special.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Kodak certainly knows colors very well. Too bad they are not around any more.

  • @mateuszwnuk9136

    @mateuszwnuk9136

    Жыл бұрын

    That very same Kodak is what made me serious about photography years ago. One of the first with easy control of aperture ISO and shutter speed even though the sensor was so small. But it helped in experimentation and I loved the results in good light. It didn't shoot RAW but I didn't even know why I would need it and I used JPEGs for a long time with the newer camera too. I still have it even though I haven't used it for years. It was my last camera before the transition to my first DSLR (smallest DSLR on the market by Olympus :)).

  • @patrickmcfadden1689
    @patrickmcfadden1689 Жыл бұрын

    Robin, another great video. I also could not afford the cameras you mention back in the early days of digital although I very much wanted a D50 at the time. Now I have a wide range of cameras from digicam to M43 to APSc and FF, some newer but most are used and date back as far as 2008 or so.

  • @i003410
    @i00341010 ай бұрын

    The good thing about photography as an hobby/art/documentary tool is everyone has different liking and interpretation of what they see and what they like. It’s personal, emotional, fun, experimental, and enjoyable, not how “colour accurate”!

  • @malcolmwright6948
    @malcolmwright6948 Жыл бұрын

    I used 3 different brands' cameras to photograph some flowers at a flower show on auto everything. Then I asked the flower show judges to tell me which camera's play back jpg was closest in colour to the flowers I'd photographed. This was at the show, so they could compare reality to the captured image. They chose the Olympus colours. I've used Olympus ever since. There were 7 judges, so if I had a colour bias, it didn't count. Each brand has its own subtle bias or look that pleases its devotees. As I publish my pictures on the website of the flower society whose judges opinions, I sought they spared me the time to get it as close to what they perceived as right as was possible.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    I have relied on Olympus color science for a long time for my work, and believe me they are more than sufficient. I am happy with what they produce. However, I also must admit, having used more cameras recently, that Pentax and Canon give better colors in some situations.

  • @malcolmwright6948

    @malcolmwright6948

    Жыл бұрын

    @Robin Wong I agree with you as to my eyes Canon has its own colour palette, which is great for flattering portraits less so for flowers. One of the things with flowers is that botanical flower paintings can still set standards that photographs can't match, particularly when most of the audience are trained botanists.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    ??? How can you use the judge's opinions about the colour accuracy of the JPG images (which also involve in-camera software) when they have not seen the original flowers???

  • @malcolmwright6948

    @malcolmwright6948

    Ай бұрын

    @@BrunoChalifour You missed the line in the original post: 'This was at the show, so they could compare reality to the captured image.' They compared the jpg to the actual flower in front of them.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    @@malcolmwright6948 you mean the edited version?

  • @zacharyfevold9610
    @zacharyfevold96109 күн бұрын

    Almost a decade ago ( I was 15) I picked up a D50 for like 50 USD because it had an error. My teenage trouble shooting skills went to work and it turns out that it showed an error because it had a 4gb SD card, and I think the max the firmware could handle was something like 2gb. I ended up picking up a cheap lens too with my after school job money. I took it on a trip overseas to visit my family in Germany as a 15 year old and to this days, those unprocessed images still look SO GOOD. I wish I knew how good I had it at the time, and ended up selling it at the end of HS for gas money to see my girlfriend. Anyways it didn't work out and I think about that D50 more than her now a decade later LOL. As it turns out, there's much more to a great photo than just sheer megapixels. I love your videos and your enthusiasm is soooo contagious! Nowadays I pretty much just shoot film. No particular reason but just because I still have my 35mm Rebel 2000 slr that I also purchased in middle school. I throw it in my car anytime I go on a trip, and it just never stops working. I might just snatch up a D50 again just so I take more pictures.

  • @nickpain6827
    @nickpain682710 ай бұрын

    Thanks so much Robin - yet another great video! I *still* miss my 5D mark I years after I traded it. I still have two 20D bodies, one infrared and one normal. I absolutely love them both and despite being a little brother to the 5D, I find my 20D delivers much of what I miss about the 5D. It says a lot that I use far more modern cameras for the wildlife and landscape photography I love to do the most, but I am constantly taking the 20D out and leaving my newer stuff at home because I love the results. If you can look at your pics and smile, I think that's the most important thing.

  • @harrison00xXx

    @harrison00xXx

    8 ай бұрын

    Same here. Despite having pretty good gear, i really enjoy taking my old point and shoot out in the wild. Such as my first camera ever, the Sony P100 and the recently purchased P200 (7,2 vs 5,1MP, faster AF and startup,...). I mean, yes, im "mildly" dissapointed if i see a nice scene of a bird and i dont have anything usable to take the shot since my point and shoot with 3x optical zoom is by far not enough when it comes to range, let alone the super slow burst speed and limited burst anyway. Its just such a charme to have something compact in the pockets which still gives better looking images (at 5.1MP!!!) compared to any modern 12-50MP phone.

  • @zenden6564
    @zenden6564 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Robin, I assume when you say you like the 'organic looking' colour coming out of the 5Dmki it's from the camera's jpeg engine, not the 5Dmki RAW files....or is it both? Thanks

  • @ste4803
    @ste4803 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Robin, thank you for another fantastic video. It is interesting how various cameras (sensors?) have different colour signature. A very long time ago, I loved colours from my D200, and D2x even more, and never understood how could anyone see D300 to have better colours. But I also have strong sentiment to Olympus 16mpx sensor. While my EM1ii is a wonderful camera, I think I prefer colours from the old em5 (mk1) and pen epl7… I can’t articulate what it is, all cameras have ‘keep warm colours” set to “off”, but they are slightly different. Of course I agree accurate colours are a must for professionals, as the success of your projects depends on it. But for many hobbyists, it’s hard to ignore, what we like 😊 best regards, Steven

  • @alanhoughton6166

    @alanhoughton6166

    11 ай бұрын

    almost exactly my experience with the D200, D2Xs, and the D300. I simply don't like the colors from the D300 as much - it brings a lot via the FPS and AF it has, but it takes me more work to get the final images in lightroom The D200 and D2Xs (and I'd add the D700) all are pretty special, IMO

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    Interesting for the discussion here is that you experienced the D200 (CCD) and the D2X (CMOS) with obviously the same conclusion as my observations between my D200 and my D3.

  • @DeMorcan
    @DeMorcan Жыл бұрын

    In the films days, I shot mostly for magazine artilces and prints. Different positive films had different colors and I would match my film to my subject. I did use positive film although it had less dynamic range, it had a nicer contrast and color. Although sometimes, I would use a low contrast film. Velvia had its place. But was not for weddings as an example. Kodachrome just lacked in landscapes, but llooked lovedly for other thinbgs. Now today with post processing, I do not worry about it any more. I do have my LUTS I use with Adobe products to match Panasonic and Olympus as sometimes I would use both cameras on a job and wanted a profile I could batch use to match the photos. Still I could often tell in magazines such as Life and National Geographic what film was used for the photo. Which means none were accurate and for those uses accuracy was not an issue, the look and emotion of different films was what sold my works.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    I think for a lot of cases color accuracy isn't an absolute necessity, as most people won't know what the actual reality looks like in color, except for the photographer. However, in commercial situations, some clients will demand matching colors, so that is when the color biases will ruin the job. I think these days, the modern cameras can capture colors very well, and there should not be too big of a problem.

  • @Dahrenhorst
    @Dahrenhorst Жыл бұрын

    I particularly shoot Sigma with their Foveon sensors, because - as far as I can see it - this sensor captures the colors most naturally. I also still have one or two old digital cameras with CCD sensors, and I may try them again just to check and compare them on this aspect.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunatey those Foveon cameras are sooooooo slow. I need speed.

  • @Dahrenhorst

    @Dahrenhorst

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robinwong That's true. Fortunately, I can live with this - my main cameras are large format cameras. Compared to them the Sigmas are lightning fast!

  • @mipmipmipmipmip

    @mipmipmipmipmip

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Dahrenhorst Sigma says it's still working on a full frame Foveon!

  • @Dahrenhorst

    @Dahrenhorst

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mipmipmipmipmip I know. They worked on that for like 10 years, and than bagged everything, starting completely anew a couple years ago. Don't know if they'll ever succeed, and I also really don't care much - APS-C and H are large enough for me.

  • @fthprodphoto-video5357

    @fthprodphoto-video5357

    Жыл бұрын

    The Sigma Quattro H is just excellent. The speed is faster than any medium format film camera and the results are on par with 6x9 slides, or even close to 6x17 when shot in panoramic mode. (I tested and compared both) CCD cameras offer the best compromise between speed, fast post processing and film like colors

  • @justcallmesando
    @justcallmesando4 ай бұрын

    Nice approach to this subject. Love seeing an Olympus pro user btw.

  • @trevorbrooks813
    @trevorbrooks813 Жыл бұрын

    Another thoughtful video Robin. Maybe if we all saw the world with the same eyes we'd all agree, but we don't so there will always be room for personal taste and we can agree to disagree. Take the same camera into different environments and you'll likely get different results. Light and colour can vary so much in different locations and from day to day. Is it hot, is it cool, how high is the humidity, how harsh is the mid-day sun, is it raining yet? You know much about this in your part of the world. Drawing conclusions becomes subjective. Thanks for posting.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Trevor. When it comes to "pleasing" colors, I agree, color is personal, and we all want different colors in our photos. However, when it comes to color accuracy, I think there is no debate. When there is too much bias, it shows, and it is not a matter of preference. I have seen clients bashing some "full frame" cameras for producing inaccurate colors.

  • @trevorbrooks813

    @trevorbrooks813

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robinwong Yes you are right of course. Thankfully most of us don't have that demand placed upon us, so we take our photography in any direction we prefer. Your posts just seem to get better and better. Thanks.

  • @mike128cky
    @mike128cky Жыл бұрын

    Hi Robin Can you let me know where and how to buy used cameras like yours.

  • @ryanjhcho
    @ryanjhcho6 ай бұрын

    Hi, is there any good second hand camera shops to buy this kind of cameras in kuala lumpur?

  • @DamianKleiman
    @DamianKleiman Жыл бұрын

    I still use Canon EOS 30D from 2006, which has CMOS sensor but it looks really different (and unique like the 5d) from current cameras.

  • @neilpiper9889
    @neilpiper988911 ай бұрын

    I shot a wedding for a friend on a 6mp Nikon D40. Looking back on the images they are beautiful. (Sony ccd sensor) I also used fill in flash for the confetti shot. The D40 synchronised for flash at 500th of a second! Perfect. I still use a 2005 Ricoh digital 8.1 megapixel ccd sensor.

  • @tomislavmiletic_
    @tomislavmiletic_ Жыл бұрын

    I had Olympus E-1 back in the day, and colours from that camera stood the test of time. And camera had great ergonomics, too. But aside from (too small) resolution, I did sell it however, when I still could get good money for it, course it was really, really too slow for mi liking...

  • @Mir1189
    @Mir1189 Жыл бұрын

    I find the discussion about different sensors interesting, but... a bit of relic from the celluloid period. I'll explain... Different film and paper had different color tones (I still believe there is something in Kodak Gold), but all camera sensors are capturing image in black and white, which is then processed using bayer filter. Its 4 color filter in front of every sensor consisting of one red, two green ad one blue filter. These values are then calculated from grey tones, to colors. At this stage there is a lot of automated calibration in process and most cameras are aiming for best color reproduction possible and the variations which occur among different brands can be changed upon post production. Like if you want to have yellowish tint of Panasonic Leica lenses, while using Olympus just add 350-700 Kelvins to white balance :) Also you may use different ways of color calibration, either in camera or in POST. On other hand discusion about CCD, CMOS and Live MOS is an interesting topic. For example there is a claim that M43 systems have higher noise because of smaller sensor surface. The thing is that on any system surface sensitive to light covers about 1/4 of each individual pixel. Rest is the analog signal amplifier and other electronics. These were made smaller on M43 and the design is different. Its not CCD, its not CMOS, but NMOS. In terms of electrical engineers, the design is not symmetrical and therefore the noise is higher. That lead to various misconceptions that F1.4 in M43 equals to F2.8 FF which is not true. Giving enough light for a certain time period will reduce noise in any situation, including higher ISO scenarios. All image sensors simply work to 'Signal to noise Ratio' or SNR for short. Its an interesting thing to know when using digital camera. Like this you can get nice clean image from bright and medium parts from the image, and you can make dark but noisier parts less noisy by making them bit darker and let noise fade to black. The other thing is with bits. The more bits per channel the sensor offers the higher accuracy of capturing the right color tone. However people tend to like warmer color tones, vivid, with slightly higher and punchier gradation. That usually means less colors rather than more. as with 10bit color gamuts in movies, those may look bit more muted even when properly displayed. Hope this helps.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    You are forgetting one detail. There are very few manufacturers of sensors. For instances lots of brands use Sony sensors (FUJI (GFX), Hasselblad, Leica, Nikon...) so the differences now lie in the processed JPGs, meaning the software on board (camera). But you are 100% right in your analysis of digital technology (another detail though "all cameras" do not use the Bayer filter, the vast majority does though: Fuji Xtrans sensor do not use the Bayer array but their own and Sigma Foveon sensors operate without any Bayer filter). Another detail: the higher noise in 4/3 camera comes not so much from the surface of the sensor but from the size of the photosites. The consequence being that between a 20 Mp 4/3 sensor and a 20 Mp FF sensor it is obvious that the FF sensor has bigger photosites (thence collects more light and does not require the same level of application of the signal). Where did you see that "on any system surface sensitive to light covers about 1/4 of each individual pixel" by definition a pixel is the information gathered by 100% of the photo site and nothing else. That some room around pixels may be taken by other technologies especially CMOS sensors (different there from CCDs, so no "any system" here, there are differences), especially non back-lit CMOSs. As for warmer tones being less colour?!? A 14-bit colour, warm or cold is still a 14-bit colour!

  • @Mir1189

    @Mir1189

    Ай бұрын

    @@BrunoChalifour Not each output is JPEG, but any color image from your camera is no longer RAW. RAW has just grey tones. This is something I forgot to actually look for, and its about higher noise. Most people simply inspect that visually and its not correct way to do it. There are tools how to measure this. Also there are different types of noise. a) Signal to Noise ratio Its something that really can be attributed to smaller photosites. From what I have read about CMOS sensors, only 25 percent of individual pixel is a photosite, rest are other electronics. This can be measured as SNR in decibels, when the image is actually processed... more like an audio signal (which is what happens during analog-digital conversion) Once you have strong enough light source, and SNR output is high enough, you are good, regardless of ISO. b) Variations among pixels. This is noise too, but its completely independent from photosite. A "red" pixel or "blue" pixel as an example, but solid color might not be recorded as exactly same color hex value by every single pixel. These can be resolved by calibration. Also look for Well depth or Full Well in relation to the image sensors.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@Mir1189 "RAW has just grey tones" : NO RAW format is a file made of 0 and 1 values, absolutely not an image whether a colour or grey-scale one. The numbers are just a record of light intensities behind red, green and blue filters (except on monochrome cameras). Those files have to be processed to be seen and as a result give a colour image. Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) has nothing to do with the size of the sensor. These numbers can be measured with any sensor, CCD, CMOS, Strain, or Foveon, whatever the size. "Once you have strong enough light source, and SNR output is high enough, you are good, regardless of ISO." this is a weird recipe as the noise increases with high ISO (meaning high amplification of the signal) and it is not so much a question of light source but of its intensity. "Variations among pixels. This is noise too, but its completely independent from photosite. A "red" pixel or "blue" pixel as an example, but solid color might not be recorded as exactly same color hex value by every single pixel. These can be resolved by calibration." I am truly puzzled. What variation among pixels?? Are you speaking on the intensity of light filtering depending on the color of the filter in front of the photo site. Photosite behind a blue filter receive less light and as such need to be more amplified than the ones behind green and red pixels (thence more noise but also the possibility to get some information in the highlights when the two other colors are saturated (pure white))?

  • @TheMikeharris7
    @TheMikeharris75 ай бұрын

    I think it's more tones than colors that make CCD sensors kind of special. I can really see it when I shoot monochrome. I started shooting on film in the 80's and I definitely see how people say it replicates a sense of image quality similar to film. I also get where people like film simulations - it's not always about color accuracy. Sure for product stuff you have to be accurate but even back in film days different films rendered colors differently. And people would do things like shoot out of date film on purpose or process the film intentionally in the wrong chemical process to get certain odd 'looks'.

  • @fthprodphoto-video5357
    @fthprodphoto-video5357 Жыл бұрын

    Just did a test recently : Sigma DP3 Quattro (foveon) vs Fx Nikon D780 (cmos) vs apsc Nikon D60 (CCD) all used with an equivalent sharp portrait prime lens.results are incredible. The Foveon offers lots of detail but the raw needs to be processed to avoid color shift. Once processed well, The Foveon portrait looks very filmic. The CCD file needs the less PP and is excellent and very sharp for 10Mp. The colors are the most accurate and just pop. Color separation is beautiful on CCD. The CMOS file is the most malleable but looks dull in comparison. It needs PP and still doesn’t look as eye catching as the CCD file.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    Interesting experiments. I would be interested in seeing and comparing the results. Now regarding processing RAW files: all images CMOS or not originate in a RAW file that requires to be processed to be seen. The difference with Sigma's Foveon compared to CMOS and CCD is that it is a very idiosyncratic sensor requiring an idiosyncratic software (or plug-in) to be processed. Second, what does "filmic" mean?? I have always found the colours generated by a Foveon sensor to be very realistic/accurate and, especially in the early days (around 2002-2003) more deprived of noise and artefacts than CCDs or CMOSes. The only issue being that they cannot compete in terms of high ISO. As for the CCD, if colours "pop", how can they be accurate. I also noticed that CCD colours had a tendency to "pop" which means a little more saturation (especially reds and blues) and contrast that "accurate" would require. [now some may find "accurate" "dull but for me it is the safest starting base, "pop" can always be added (it is just like salt or pepper in a recipe).

  • @fthprodphoto-video5357

    @fthprodphoto-video5357

    Ай бұрын

    @@BrunoChalifour I’ll try to reply as best as I can to your message. First off, the CCD raw files (if shot at lower ISO) require very few adjustments such as sharpening, levels or curves depending on the exposure and pop naturally without being over-saturated. It’s inherent to their ability to separate colors better than other sensor/ without loosing colors or detail. For example, older CMOS sensors and still newer ones (that are less prone to this issue) tend to blow the gamma of magenta and oranges in mixed lightings, which will kill skin or clothes detail on portraits. So with older CMOS cameras (D700 to D750 generation) these specific colors needed to be shiftet to a different hue and saturation independently, depending on the lighting conditions and camera generation, which was very time consuming to get the best out of the portraits or landscapes. This is not the case with CCD files which generally show very accurate colors and color separation (or color contrast) : each color is very accurate and easily distinguishable, which creates and overall richness and pop, by défaut. Regarding the Sigma cameras and software, it’s true and very frustrating that Sigma never came out with a faster, more efficient and bug free version of its sigma pro software. It very often crashes, even with a good computer (64 bits of ram, excellent processor and SSD) but I compared the files with my Fuji GX617 and Bronica GS1 Velvia and ektar photographs, using mirror lockup with the GS1, so very sharp, and the Sigma quattro H offers very close results. I also compared the Foveon shots with my D850 and if shot at base ISO, the Foveon offers more richness in terms of textures and again, colors. But, the colors have a tendency to shift and provide almost unnatural, more artistic colors. This also depends on the way the raw files are processed of course.

  • @christophejournoud2773
    @christophejournoud27737 ай бұрын

    Hi Robin, Did you try the Canon 6D mk1 ? It has best autofocus (centrer spot for sensibility and accuracy) and color science is very similar to 5D mk1

  • @zijadzikedzehovic6206
    @zijadzikedzehovic620611 ай бұрын

    i am Nikon user, but fell in love with Olympus, i got one.

  • @roberthunt989
    @roberthunt989 Жыл бұрын

    As a current member of Fuji World I currently use a CMOS. But in the last year I have re edited old images with new software (Luminar NEO, DXO Photoshop 5 ) The images from my Pentax ist* and K10 D both CCD sensors have a special quality. Not just the color. Initially the CMOS was not as good as the CCD and the biggest reason for the companies going to them was cost. I agree today they perform well but I wonder how the CCD would be today if they had a parallel improvement line.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Well I guess the reason CCD was abandoned was because it could no longer match the technical performance of CMOS (and the lower cost).

  • @neilcousineau4956
    @neilcousineau4956 Жыл бұрын

    Good one Robin, there is way too much hype for the older cameras and lots of other KZreadrs promoting them as better. In my opinion, just get a camera that you can afford, like and "want" to use and create the photos "you" want. I have an old 2012 CCD Fuji S4200 camera (I love this camera) and I tried it side x side along side my old 2015 Olympus EM-10 mk ii. With the exact same subject, focal length, etc - and side x side "printed" photos - I prefer the 2015 CMOS sensor in the Olympus. My favorite pocket camera is my iPhone 7, it also produces great colours.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Neil, I don't get the hype either! I just shoot with what I can and enjoy the whole process.

  • @cristianm8691
    @cristianm8691 Жыл бұрын

    I am always surprised by those vibrant colors that you get in your photos with Olympus cameras. Is it some form of revealed, the benefits of using the worspace? I don't remember seeing any video where you talk about it, otherwise I would appreciate it if you could guide me!

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    I no longer use Olympus software for my post-processing work. I only use them when I need to review a new camera that has no RAW compatibility with other popular software. I currently use Capture One Pro for my image editing.

  • @mmadmic
    @mmadmic9 ай бұрын

    I also have Canon, and the way Canon renders the color is one of my favorite, Olympus colors are also on my list About old digital cameras, I have a few of them Olympus, Canon , Ricoh, HP, fuji, Toshiba, Nikon and a few exotic brands such as Traveler and all camera has its own touch and even the "worst" in terms of quality could provide this little tiny something unique that allows to have different pictures.

  • @thepirateshoots
    @thepirateshoots Жыл бұрын

    I do like the picture from the scene - 0:23 - which camera did you use?

  • @minhta7540
    @minhta7540 Жыл бұрын

    Olympus E1 is Kodak CCD sensor. Very special by itself. Bought 2 after seeing your video. 😂

  • @leckywoznicki5393
    @leckywoznicki5393 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you :)

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Lecky

  • @odysseusreturns9133
    @odysseusreturns9133 Жыл бұрын

    I heard that argument too. So I decided to compare my pictures taken on Canon bridge cameras. One lot taken on a Powershot Pro1 with CCD and another lot taken on a more recent Powershot SX50 with CMOS sensor. While I am generally pleased with both cameras, the SX50 has the edge on performance, IE, frames per second, zoom range, and faster auto-focus. But when it comes to colour rendition without editing, the older Pro1 has the edge.

  • @bonjovi1612
    @bonjovi16125 ай бұрын

    Hi Robin, if you have time maybe you could answer my question, thanks. I’m a Nikon user and apparently the d7000 has the same sensor as the Pentax K-01, do you think I could expect the same colour performance with the Nikon. Again, many thanks.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    Both the Pentax K-01 and the Nikon D700 use the same Sony CMOS sensor. The colours coming out of the JPG are going to be slightly different because of the processing software that each brand designed and injected into their cameras. Not only that but the RAW formats are different too as Pentax uses Adobe's DNG format whereas Nikon uses their own RAW format, NEF.

  • @Gitareur
    @Gitareur Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Robin for this entertaining video, again. Because of your Canon 5D review I bought one and also I bought some Olympus Pen camera's. My questions are: why don't you use a protective filter for all your expensive lenses? I always buy a Skylight filter when I invest in some new glass. Also I am fond of your single hand straps. Where can you buy those? Keep up the good work and thanks from the Netherlands.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    As a reviewer, having a filter on the lens will introduce another layer of glass, that can affect the image quality.

  • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
    @ScottAlanMillerVlog Жыл бұрын

    I still have a Nikon D50. Got that as my first serious digital camera when it was new!

  • @yvainbenoit1010
    @yvainbenoit1010 Жыл бұрын

    Hello Robin. I also bought an old D40 because i wanted to make again pictures as i did with my D50. Nice colors again yes, maybe little warmer versus the OM1 OM10 ones. I also feel great light. I definitly love these images. May be its also a question of multicoating treatment of old Nikon lenses 18/140mm or 18/200 or 18/105...

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Certainly, the D40 is a fantastic camera too!

  • @davidbryant88
    @davidbryant88 Жыл бұрын

    I’ve heard that the 6d ii has the same color profile as the original 5D. I loved my 5D wish I had kept it.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    I have not tried the 6D II, but for modern cameras, I'd go mirrorless if I can.

  • @yaupie
    @yaupie Жыл бұрын

    I once had Olympus XZ-1. I got the feeling that the color (of photos) are more saturated than later cameras from Olympus which use CMOS sensors. But I never had XZ-2 to compare against XZ-1. As for the topic of accurate color vs pleasing color, mobile phones are usually biased towards the latter.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Mobile phones just oversaturate, oversharpen, and overly reduce the noise. The images look overbaked.

  • @yaupie

    @yaupie

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robinwong Fully agree.

  • @carneades.

    @carneades.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robinwong Try an iPhone 7 (Plus). No oversharpening and oversaturated colors. After the 7 (Plus) Apple's colorscience and algoritms start becoming more and more meh.

  • @OutRAjious
    @OutRAjious Жыл бұрын

    Canon 5D original sensor has amazing velvety black lost in the 5D2….. the most sensual sensor

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeap loving what the Canon 5D can do!

  • @douglas_hifi
    @douglas_hifi Жыл бұрын

    Thanks!!!

  • @JimiCanRead
    @JimiCanRead Жыл бұрын

    What are some cheap CCD cameras worth trying? Especially any with nice, affordable ultra wide lenses? I wonder if this might be a cheaper way to play with architectural photography rather than spending a few hundred on an ultra wide for my m4/3 lumix

  • @Thirsty_Fox
    @Thirsty_Fox Жыл бұрын

    I think there are just some gems of cameras with sensor/readout hardware pairings (and JPEG engines) that work in perfect harmony, whether CCD or CMOS. I have one older Fuji P&S CCD camera that takes incredible photos for its size and age, but I also attribute some of that to its lens -- I have a few other older CCD cameras that take quite awful photos, however they do still have a 'point-n-shoot' look to them which can be interesting in itself. Variety is the spice of life and it's most true of photography, isn't it?

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeap, we don't lack choices when it comes to gear these days.

  • @shogun4612

    @shogun4612

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi What the model Fuji you got? Thanks

  • @Thirsty_Fox

    @Thirsty_Fox

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shogun4612 The F30 is the one that I like -- It takes really nice photos.

  • @StreetsOfVancouverChannel
    @StreetsOfVancouverChannel Жыл бұрын

    Sony sensors often have the most 'tonally neutral' look but this is intentional. It allows for the widest latitude in terms of editing potentiality whereas if the colours are pushed/processed/saturated at the time of the capture that will impact the range of editing choices one can make. Having said that I still use my Nikon P7100 that has a CCD 1.7" sensor pretty regularly. The camera is super slow in capturing an image but it provides excellent results if the light is ample/great... it's a terrible camera if they volume of light drops off.

  • @Graid
    @Graid Жыл бұрын

    I still miss my E1's colours! I use a Nikon D7500 now and it's great, quality wise, but, the colours aren't so out and out pleasing as the E1's. I would also say that even my Olympus E520 (not a CCD camera) had a certain way of doing colour that I also wish I knew how to emulate on my Nikon. Something about the blues and the reds, that was always warm without turning too yellow like my Nikon tends to, and very pleasing in the brightness of the blues, without making the picture ever look cold. The E1, as well, at least, mine did, set at low contrast, had a really nice depth to the shadows.

  • @TheNarrowbandChannel
    @TheNarrowbandChannel Жыл бұрын

    Seams like the price on used E1s have gone up. Glad I held on to both of mine. Now for colors they seam to be the same to me. However the transition between pixels of different color is what I see as having more pop. I think that had to do with the absence of micro lenses that scatter and mix some light between pixels.

  • @samuelmingo5090
    @samuelmingo50904 ай бұрын

    I totally respect everything you do and mean this in no disrespectful way. Maybe your eyes are just not as sensitive to colors as others. We're all different after all. Personally, I see the difference. It's a slight difference, but just enough to push an image over the top. I've shot ccd, Olympus 16 and 20 megapixel cameras, canon, Nikon, fujifilm. CMOS is a fantastic technology, because ccd can't shoot worth a darn in low light. They do however seem to grab rich color much more than cmos.

  • @jameslevine6137
    @jameslevine6137 Жыл бұрын

    I can see many commercial situations where color accuracy is key. OTOH I think selection of sensors/pipelines is akin to selection of films. You pick the tool appropriate for the job. I enjoy having sensors with different looks. BTW I picked up an old e-m5 recently, and boy, those are raw files with an opinion! I love the colors but no way do I expect a faithful representation of the moment from that camera.

  • @AD-by8wx
    @AD-by8wx Жыл бұрын

    It would be interesting to compare cc'd to film

  • @djengsridisini
    @djengsridisini Жыл бұрын

    halo, i am using nikon d50, d40, and d200 and i love their colour, specially when using them plus nikon flash (sb 800, sb 25)

  • @djengsridisini

    @djengsridisini

    Жыл бұрын

    i have question, olympus em 5 mark i or epl 7/8, when i need an olympus camera for good result at iso3200? because i want to buy one of them, thanks

  • @djengsridisini

    @djengsridisini

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @colorist-idealist
    @colorist-idealist Жыл бұрын

    CCD power! The body and soft shutter of the E1 are simply inimitable.

  • @jeffhalebopp
    @jeffhalebopp Жыл бұрын

    One thing I noticed with my old ccd panasonic camera is when capturing 720p video, it seems to have a global shutter. So there is no jello effect in video. This is very interesting.

  • @numbersix8919

    @numbersix8919

    Жыл бұрын

    That is true. CCD is a global shutter. I can shoot passengers inside a train passing my train from the opposite direction as if they're standing still. Isn't that what a camera is supposed to do? The reason CCDs were abandoned was to save on manufacturing cost.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    I guess we also have to consider other aspects like high ISO, higher resolution without losing too much dynamic range, all which the CMOS sensors can surpass CCD very well. The drive for technical perfection is getting a bit out of hand.

  • @DannyB-cs9vx
    @DannyB-cs9vx Жыл бұрын

    I am a novice JPEG shooter. I sometimes shoot in vivid mode. At a night carnival with colored lights is one example that comes to mind. A daytime photo of the same carnival doesn't seem to trigger the same emotion or memory. The adult entertainment district looks very different during the day. Perhaps the neon lights remind us of a childhood carnival? In my town we have hot air balloon events once a year. This is another time exaggerating reality is fun.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    JPEG is great, and I also rely on JPEG for quick delivery that does not give me enough time to sit down and process.

  • @NewWorldFilm
    @NewWorldFilm Жыл бұрын

    Air quotes were plentiful and called for in this video. I also agree CCD sensors on cameras I’ve used don’t look special to me. All I remember is how slow my old digital cameras were compared to newer ones.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I just don't see the magic!

  • @stephencrowsen8537
    @stephencrowsen85373 ай бұрын

    I was hoping to see some pictures from the Canon 5D and that Pentax camera because you praised them.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    3 ай бұрын

    Then look around, I have made so many videos about those cameras. Feel free to find them, easily.

  • @keiththewheelman
    @keiththewheelman Жыл бұрын

    I've owned 4 4/3 cameras the e500,e410, e3 and e620 that is the order that they were released in not bought. But I can say that the e500 and e620 gave me the best colours with the least effort, the e3 was close. But the e410 was the worse- having a brown tinge that I managed to adjust our after many 10's of photos (but it could also have been that the e410 came from a market in Rebat morocco... similarly the e500 came from a pawnshop in Bogota). This experience/ancdote would support that it took a year or two for the engineers to get the cmos sensors to give a colour output similar to the CCD sensors.

  • @peteryungcp
    @peteryungcp Жыл бұрын

    Hi Robin. I totally agreed with you camera should produce “accurate” color. However, at the end you said Pentax and Canon 5D ccd camera color is the most pleasing. Well…are they “accurate” as well? I am a bit confused…😅

  • @froreyfire

    @froreyfire

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe a bit of your confusion stems from the fact that you believe that the Pentax K-01 and Canon 5D have CCD sensors. They don't.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Pentax and Canon cameras mentioned have CMOS sensors

  • @peteryungcp

    @peteryungcp

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robinwong So have you got any comment which CCD camera is the most “accurate” to return true situations of color in reality?☺️

  • @duncanthorn6338
    @duncanthorn63386 ай бұрын

    I'm with you. I don't see anything special about CCD sensors either, and I have used quite a few, as well as CMOS. I also agree about accurate colours over pleasing colours. Keep it up!

  • @jamespowers8826
    @jamespowers88262 ай бұрын

    I had an Olympus E-10 back in the day. The 4 megapixel photos were fine, but I sure wouldn't want to use that camera today.

  • @rdn658
    @rdn65810 ай бұрын

    Where I come from, the D50 is worth 140 USD. Where can I find such price for those cameras?

  • @averymcdaniel423
    @averymcdaniel4235 ай бұрын

    I bought a D50 for $8 from a thrift store. I love the colors

  • @doozledumbler5393
    @doozledumbler5393 Жыл бұрын

    There's an in-depth website that compares a Leica camera with CCD with the later CMOS sensors by providing a blind test comparison. Honestly, I couldn't tell the difference.

  • @BrunoChalifour

    @BrunoChalifour

    Ай бұрын

    Is it reddotforum. If it is, yes the results speak by themselves.

  • @irresponsiblepictures7451
    @irresponsiblepictures7451 Жыл бұрын

    I used to be quite the Fuji fanboy but their colours were just off putting for me with every camera update (last camera was the x100v) Agree with a lot you said here, Robin. I own a E500, E300 and some other ccd cameras. I also own a Panasonic L1 (mos). The E300 gives lovely images for sure but I much prefer the output the L1 gives me. Has that pop to the colours BUT is accurate. I feel a lot of this boils down to the colour science. These earlier cameras (5D MK1 for example) came out at the time not far off from the film days so it seems the makers approach was to replicate closer to that or give out as accurate, true to life images. Modern digital cameras now compete with each other digital cameras. Including Fuji. I find skin tones really bad in most modern cameras. Side note:- Stop tempting me getting a K-01!!!!

  • @WhoIsSerafin
    @WhoIsSerafin Жыл бұрын

    Still don’t see it and i started with the first DSLR cameras back then.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeap, I don't see it too.

  • @toddm6999
    @toddm699910 ай бұрын

    Nikon d200 is a beast and it tales beautiful pictures - colors is real result of this format. Not to mention the build quality and thoughtful menu and buttons location

  • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
    @ScottAlanMillerVlog Жыл бұрын

    I'm planning to buy a "new" D3000 this year for this very reason.

  • @columbusontario
    @columbusontario Жыл бұрын

    Love my jpeg colours out of my EM 1 mark II. But love the colours out of my Nikon D700 even more

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    I for whatever reason, cannot find myself liking Nikon colors! I'd go Canon if I have to choose. But Olympus works just fine.

  • @columbusontario

    @columbusontario

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robinwong fair enough. We all have our own preferences. Same as our preferences for cars, clothes, pets,food,partners etc. Keep up the good work Robin. PS I just bought the Olympus 60mm macro. Can’t wait for the warm weather to roll into here in Toronto to get out and use it.

  • @jigggro
    @jigggro7 ай бұрын

    The pleasing thing is just about art and nostalgia.

  • @alanhoughton6166
    @alanhoughton616611 ай бұрын

    I really like the CCD cameras I use - a Nikon D200 and sometimes a D70, but I also like some of the CMOS cameras I use, the D2Xs and the D700. I don't like the D300 as much, but it makes up for it with FPS and AF performance for birds, etc. With some newer Nikons, I haven't liked the color as much out of the camera, and find I spend time in Lightroom trying to get what I think I saw when I took the picture. Maybe some if it is the entire range of things Nikon did during that era to process the images back then - CFA's, color accuracy, tonal gain, photosites, etc. I think that the demand to get better and better ISO performance took it's toll in other ways - just a thought

  • @70sRetroRoom
    @70sRetroRoom11 ай бұрын

    I would say from my Nikon D200 that has a 10MP CCD sensor, the camera does give a warm orange tint on the pics, which does remind me of film photos I have from the 1970s. Now with that being said, I compared the Nikon D200 with the Nikon D300 which has a CMOS sensor. To my eye, the D300 colors are more realistic to what my real eyes see. The Nikon D200 does give a more film like appearance, but who said that is how the colors look in real life? To be honest, the old film colors to my eyes (mostly Kodak film), did not look like I see colors in person. However, the CCD sensor in my Nikon D200 gives a bit more even noise pattern more like film. That is my take. The modern CMOS sensors totally smoke the old CCD sensors for true to life colors in my opinion. However, if I want the more 70s film look, the CCD sensor in the Nikon D200 does a good job for this. True to life colors, the CMOS sensor in my Nikon D300 does better. However, I am waiting for my original Canon 5D to arrive in the mail. I have to see if the colors everyone is saying are so great in the original 5D is in fact true to my eyes.😅

  • @Kvistum-Media
    @Kvistum-Media Жыл бұрын

    This video demonstrates perfectly how the latest progressions and updates in camera development are marginal and more or less irrelevant for most practical purposes, at least when it comes to image quality alone.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    I think in terms of image quality, we have reached a point of sufficiency some time ago, any camera can deliver great results. However to say that the progressions and developments are marginal is also not true, there is significant progress in AI AF tracking, and computational photography, which simplified overall photography workflow and enabled more sophisticated photography done in camera.

  • @Kvistum-Media

    @Kvistum-Media

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robinwong What you say is also true, Robin. But for purists that find pleasure in manual, slowed down shooting processes anyway, old school tech can be more than good enough. Gear also get a longer life that way.

  • @bsuthe
    @bsuthe Жыл бұрын

    I have never been able to see how CCD colors are any better than CMOS colors. I always shoot in "normal" rather than "vivid". I can always do any enhancement I might want afterwards, but I seldom do.

  • @armanddimeo6575
    @armanddimeo6575 Жыл бұрын

    No digital camera or film produces perfectly accurate color. I agree that Olympus colors are not perfectly accurate, because no camera does this. But to my eye, Olympus cameras have a good balance between accurate and pleasing colors.

  • @robinwong

    @robinwong

    Жыл бұрын

    No, there is no perfect color, but there are also severely bad, inaccurate colors.

  • @AvidRetro
    @AvidRetro Жыл бұрын

    I tried upgrading to a Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS45 (Lumix DMC-TZ57) and it was worse than my old Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS7 (Lumix DMC-TZ10) so I went back to the latter!

  • @rasmuswi
    @rasmuswi Жыл бұрын

    One of the things that have definitely bitten me more than once is how ridiculously easy it is to overexpose bright red objects with my E-M1 MK1. During my Peru trip in 2014 I shot a series of Peruvian cock-of-the-rock pictures, and to my disappointment the birds came ut as more or less uniform red blobs in my RAW files. And this was in the rain forest, under a thick cover of vegetation. I've forgotten the details, but apparently Olympus chose to sacrifice dynamic range in the red end of the spectrum to get more range in shorter wavelengths. On the other hand, considering how few of my pictures that feature bright red objects like roses, or those peruvian cock-of-the-rocks, filling almost the whole frame I kind of understand why Olympus made this choice. Also, I have recently purchased an E-M1X and an OM-1 and I have so far not taken a single picture of a red rose in bright sunlight so I have no idea if things have improved since the original E-M1.

  • @Victorm61767
    @Victorm617679 ай бұрын

    Yes is true cmos has now good improvements nice vibrant colors less noise sharper . Ccd is still good too just some cameras as cmos cameras .

  • @jeffslade1892
    @jeffslade1892 Жыл бұрын

    For product shots, and scientific/technical, colour authenticity is paramount. Authenticity meaning duplicating the original. For that Lumix Standard Photostyle is probably the most authentic of any camera brand. Seriously, if you're into product shots, you want this. Problem there is the Standard is often denigrated as boring, because it is. And so we have the Fuji film emulation, the PEN-F that can fiddle with its colour gain to emulate film and E-series CCD colours, so can the E-P7, and if we poke around inside it, so can a Lumix. Sadly most Olympus squash their magenta end and cannot reproduce violet at all well. Personally I like the CCD colour rendition out of my old Camedia C-2040Z even if it is only 2Mp and a bit clunky, but I am not going to rush out to buy another old CCD camera.