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Panasonic G6 – The new micro 4/3 camera that sits closer to its GH range than ever

Reported by Dan Chung and Mat Gallagher:

Panasonic DMC-G6 threequarter

No line of video capable cameras seems to divide online opinion more than the Panasonic micro 4/3 range. The cameras do have a following among some news and documentary shooters, such as Sky News shooter Andy Porch.

Today sees the launch of the new Lumix G6. The model is from the mid-range G line but has much better specs than the previous G5 model and is now much closer to GH models for video. While the DSLR revolution may have passed, the lower end offerings are getting much better for video – with cameras such as the Nikon D5200 – and this is good news for budget-conscious shooters.

Panasonic DMC-G6 back

The smaller than 35mm sensor and the active hacking community around the older GH2 continue to rouse strong opinions. The G6 features the same 16.05MP sensor as the GH2 but in an updated body.  It’s not clear at this stage whether it uses the same anti-alias filter and how the image quality will compare, though it is likely that the new Venus Engine processor is likely to deliver improved low-light performance and certainly promises better high ISO and AF performance.

The ergonomics have been improved over both the GH2 and the G5, with a higher shouldered design, an improved touch screen TFT and 1.44m dot equivalent OLED EVF. Like the GH3 it gains 3.5mm audio jack – instead of the 2.5mm on the GH2. As with the G5, it allows touch screen AF in video, though previously this has not been very effective.

Panasonic continue to region cripple these cameras. Video shooters wanting multi-region and the higher bitrates that the GH2 hack offers are probably better off with that model. Especially now that GH2′s are more readily available used or discounted.

Panasonic DMC-G6 front

The G6 does seem to offer many of the improvements of the GH3 for a lower price. As far as I can see, the major advantage for video now with the GH3 is its better build quality and higher capacity batteries.

So in short, the G6 looks interesting but not revolutionary, and if you are considering buying one, it’s probably worth a look at a GH2 first.

Panasonic DMC-G6 top

Specs:

* 16.05-megapixel Live MOS Sensor and Venus Engine

* Fast, Accurate Light Speed AF

* New 1440K-dot Equivalent OLED LVF (Live View Finder)

* P/S/A/M Manual Control and 50p(50Hz)/24p Full HD Video

* Easy Wireless Connectivity via Wi-Fi® / NFC with Smartphones

* Creative Panorama and Creative Control with 19 Filter Effects

This from Panasonic:

The new powerful Venus Engine coupled with the LUMIX DMC-G6’s 16.05M Live MOS Sensor enable users to demonstrate the true image quality achievable with a DSLM camera. Furthermore the camera has an improved ISO range from 160 ISO all the way up to 25,600 ISO (extended) allowing photographs to be captured in spite of very little light in some environments.

Boasting a high speed AF system, ‘Accurate AF’ and ‘Low Light AF’ for shooting in low-light conditions, you’ll never miss the perfect moment with the LUMIX DMC-G6. A wide range of AF modes are available, including multiple-area AF, Face Detection, and AF Tracking resulting in the LUMIX DMC-G6 being able to lock onto any subject and keep it in focus even if it moves. Additionally, the LUMIX DMC-G6’s rapid burst shooting capability – at seven Frames per Second (FPS) in full resolution, can capture multiple shots of fast-moving subjects with stunning clarity.

The quality advances of the LUMIX DMC-G6 are not restricted to still images. A 24p video mode has been added enabling users to capture moving images and play them back with a dedicated ‘film like’ appearance. The sensor and Venus Engine enable the camera to record in Full HD 1080/50p, with stereo sound, producing professional movie quality with minimal noise. With outputs in both AVCHD progressive and MP4, the LUMIX DMC-G6 provides wide compression and compatibility options. The long recording times, instant access controls, advanced AF system and LUMIX G lenses specifically designed for movie shooting, means the LUMIX DMC-G6 is the perfect option for capturing beautiful movies with ease.

Giving photographers an enhanced view and faster operation

The LUMIX DMC-G6 benefits from an OLED viewfinder which is not only brighter than a traditional LCD viewfinder but is also faster to display images, offers better visibility outdoors in bright sunlight and increases battery life due to lower power consumption. With a choice of using either the Electronic Viewfinder (EVF) with eye sensor, or the high resolution, 3.0-inch free-angle monitor to compose your shots and movies, you can capture the moment as the situation demands. Meanwhile, the revolutionary touch control shooting – including full-area touch focusing where the focus can be set immediately to the subject, or to the background, by just one touch of the large monitor even when using the EVF – gives you the control to compose and create stunning images.

Cable-free Connectivity with Wi-Fi and NFC

Introduced into the LUMIX G range with the LUMIX DMC-GF6, the LUMIX DMC-G6 also features integrated Wi-Fi and NFC connectivity offering a more flexible shooting experience and easy image sharing from an interchangeable lens camera. After the initial setup, tablets and smartphones for remote shooting can be connected with a simple touch without having to re-enter authorisation details every time.

Posted on April 23rd, 2013 by Mat Gallagher | Category: DSLR video news, Panasonic cameras, Panasonic GH2 | Permalink | Comments (1)

Panasonic USA posts Lumix GH3 video preview

By site editor Dan Chung:

Panasonic have posted an official product preview video showing their upcoming GH3 – a replacement for the popular GH2. Clearly designed with both stills and video in mind the camera has HD frame rates up to 60P and increased bit rate for video of 50Mbps and 72Mbps in ALL-I. The camera has a new Venus processing engine coupled with a 16 megapixel Live MOS sensor.

Update: It seems the video has now been removed from Youtube by Panasonic but someone else has re-posted it.

The smallish body is made of a magnesium alloy body which is claimed to be dust and splash proof. A vertical grip is shown on the camera which offers a range of controls. The whole camera looks like a far more professional affair than previous GH models.

The video features shots of Philip Bloom and cinematographer Bruce Logan working with the cameras. My friend Getty Images shooter Daniel Berehulak of Getty Images is also featured shooting stills with the camera. It is obvious that the camera is already in professional hands and being put through its paces.

Philip Bloom using the GH3 in a grab from the video

There is no pricing or availability information yet.

This story first reported by www.43rumors.com, thanks to Frank Redward for bringing it to our attention

Posted on September 14th, 2012 by admin | Category: Panasonic cameras | Permalink | Comments (1)

Going undercover with the Panasonic GH2 – By Sky News shooter Andy Portch

By Andy Portch

No lights, no tripod and no mucking about. That’s how we continued our coverage of the growing Tibetan unrest in Western China.
 
Please be aware that our story ‘Nun self-immolation’ includes footage given to us of a protesting Tibetan nun setting herself on fire. The rest of the story is shot entirely with my Panasonic GH2 camera. In our other latest report from Aba town we shot the Chinese security crackdown using the GH2 with a couple of additional shots from an AVCHD camcorder. My correspondent is Holly Williams.
 
Last year we had been detained and turned back from reaching Aba town by Chinese police. This time to avoid detection we drove a mammoth 1500km through neighbouring provinces and across the massive Sichuan Mountains. We stayed in ‘safe’ guest houses and travelled mostly at night, experiencing heart-stopping near misses with yaks, sheep, prostrating pilgrims and police check points.
 
We are not on a mission against the Chinese regime. The remote Tibetan regions of Western China are not officially off-limits to journalists or foreigners. We applied for permission to visit, but our official requests were unanswered. In reality the region is under a colossal Chinese security clampdown. The Tibetans we did manage to speak to were scared and claimed a lack of religious and cultural freedom. It is dreadful that dozens of Tibetan monks, nuns and lay people are setting themselves on fire. The Chinese Foreign Ministry call our latest reporting ‘unnecessary’.
 
We arrived in Aba town before dawn and immediately experienced a problem I’ve never known before. The inside of the car windows had iced up. As the sun rose the ice turned to condensation and fogged our windows. It was a stomach churning episode as we sat with massed Chinese security outside our car, with the fogged up windows preventing me from shooting anything. Fortunately I found a Zacuto anti-fog wipe in my bag and cleared enough of the window to get some footage before we had to leave.
 
Sky News is an HD station shooting Panasonic P2 HD, but to get these stories they accepted my GH2 recording AVCHD internally in interlaced format at 17mbps. (Currently a lot of broadcasters do not like progressive shooting, even at the higher bit rate.)
 

Aba town was shot almost completely from inside our car.  We had little time on the ground and limited access to our subjects. On both trips I had four lenses with me. It should have been three, but the Lumix 14-140mm came along for the ride.  My main lenses were the Voigtlander Nokton 25mm F0.95,  Leica 14-50mm F2.8-F3.5 4/3rds lens with adapter and SLR magic 12mm F1.6. (Note: The Micro Four thirds GH2 has a crop factor of almost two compared to full frame 35mm cameras).
 

Frame grab from the SLR Magic 12mm lens

I wish all my lenses were made by Voigtlander. The Nokton 25mm gets my stories noticed. The Leica 14-50mm shares an organic quality and I like the medium zoom range, image stabilizing and faster speed.  I don’t like the jumpy manual focusing with Leica’s electronic focus ring. I have retired this Leica lens many times, but keep coming back to it.  The Lumix 14-140mm I find hard to manual focus and the image clinical by comparison. It should have stayed at home, but I wasn’t sure how far away I’d be from my subject. The SLR Magic 12mm F1.6 is a mixed bag. It does flare wide open, but I rarely use it below F2. It has an appealing image softness which works well. It is relatively heavy and annoyingly the mount sticks with my GH2 and AF101. The factory de-clicked aperture ring is a bonus, but aperture and focus ring grease stiffens below freezing. What the 12mm does beautifully for me is near focus work. (If you use Nikon lenses you’ll be happier because it focuses the same way.)
 

Frame grab from the Voigtlander 25mm f0.95

I am eagerly awaiting the new Lumix X series 12-35mm and 35-100mm lenses which Panasonic have shown as prototypes. I wish there was a third mid fast zoom (12-60mm), which is a better workhorse focal length for news. A common problem is being caught with a lens on the camera that is too long or too wide. I know snappers are rolling their eyes saying “use two camera bodies”. Let’s hope the new Lumix X lenses have decent manual focus rings with end stops.
 
I use ND8 filters when I am shooting outdoors. A three stop reduction I find is the minimum in daylight to shoot anything. I do wonder why camera electronics and sensors can’t use tiny ISO to help out here.  I haven’t got Variable ND filters for each lens and anyway find them fiddly. With my old Canon 5D mkII the Variable ND softness was a benefit reducing moiré and aliasing – not an issue with the GH2. Make no mistake; changing lenses and neutral density filters is the biggest challenge of shooting DSLR for news and doco.

I did not take a tripod for either Tibetan story. We had to appear low key. Some shots are fine handheld, but key establishers must be stable. A Gorillapod Focus rolled up in my bag was quickly and discreetly deployed. I found the Gorillapod too lightweight for my 5D, but the perfect GH2 companion.  I’ve also adopted the Gorillapod as my handheld rig. Hand holding the small sized GH2 on its own gave bumpy results, but when I braced the gorillapod legs together in any fashion against my shoulder or chest, smoothness returned. Beware: Gorillapod leg joints become looser in cold weather.
 
Taking no lamps meant the impromptu indoor interview at night for the first story was a challenge. I relied on minimum practical room lighting and a bedside lamp on an extension cable. I used the Nokton 25mm handheld, but with high ISO of 1250.
 
The GH2 does a good job recording atmospheric sound. You need to avoid heavy breathing as you hold the camera close to your face or crouch over it. For interviews I use a simple external recorder and lavaliere microphone.  I have an Olympus LS-11 unit that can record for eleven hours. Audio syncing is no longer a headache with software like Pluraleyes.  If carrying extra gear is not an issue then hooking up my old Audio Ltd radio mic setup gives me headphone monitoring of the signal going into the camera (but not what is actually being recorded).
 
The BCU interview in Aba town looks good with my Leica 14-50mm set at 50mm wide open. When we met our interviewee he sobbed almost immediately. We moved swiftly to a safe location to record the interview. I thought if tears rolled down his cheeks this shot was going to be very moving. In true Tibetan style our interviewee managed to hold his emotions together during our interview and the tear shot didn’t happen.
 

Frame grab from Leica 14-50mm 4/3 lens + adapter

We didn’t hang about in Aba town and began the long journey back through the checkpoints. In daylight we weren’t so lucky with our escape. In three towns we were detained and roughed up by the security forces. I had my camera taken, laptop searched and all files deleted from the audio recorder. The Chinese security was extremely angry at our presence. At one checkpoint I had two paramilitary ‘People’s Armed Police’ officers holding me down as they took away our laptop.
 
At the final checkpoint, police, paramilitary and plain clothes security thugs threatened our driver. He was terrified; we couldn’t leave him so far from his home province. Our only option was a crazy journey in a beaten up VW saloon across a mountain range in gathering darkness. We were pursued by plain clothes security in a four wheel drive with its number plates covered. I confess to being very scared; anything could have happened to us and no-one would have known. The snow was thicker than we could manage, but there was nowhere to turn back to. We crested the mountains and descended a 100km section at walking pace on a single track road. In the gloom the towering gorge around us resembled a Christmas card from hell. We were followed by the plain clothes cops through the night to the provincial border. Next day we drove out to Xi’an and our driver back to his home province.
 
These stories from the Tibetan region of China are disturbing. We included the footage of the burning nun after much thought. I spent a late night grimly blurring every frame to make it more bearable to watch and broadcast. Whilst doing this I glanced up to see a mysterious apparition glide through our office. Taken aback I scuttled home.  (Our news editors later made the decision to cut the self immolation footage from the final broadcast).
 
The edits were straightforward. The AVCHD footage was converted to Apple Prores LT on ingest to Final Cut Pro 7. Grading was done with Magic Bullet Looks and Nattress Film Effects.
 
The DSLR revolution has not opened mainstream programme making to the masses. I’m not sure it ever will. Programme making is a craft and skill like any other.

The DSLR is a camera that gives a lot of bang for your buck and combined with ease of video hosting thanks to sites like Vimeo it gives opportunity for creative filmmakers to promote their work. For cinema work the breakthrough is the low price not the visual difference.

But for me, the DSLR is simply the latest tool; a good one that brings the visual creativity of photography to the video world.  Compared to small sensor video it is a massive shift.

I’ve watched all the newer large sensor cameras coming out lately. I don’t want to pop the C300 bubble; it is the latest hybrid large sensor camera, but plenty of quality options are out there and more coming. The question is, can your project see the difference between C300 and other DSLR video? Is the difference worth the money? If the quality difference matters then maybe a better camera exists. In other words the C300 fits a niche, but it is not the ultimate solution.
 
I admit to a contradiction in my work. I shot the recent Japan earthquake/tsunami anniversary with a regular broadcast P2HD camera. For ’live’ and ‘one off’ events it gives zero chance of missing a shot – aside from operator error! I can confidently, creatively and quickly shoot news sequences impossible with my current DSLR set up.
 
The DSLR video honeymoon is over. The attraction of the ‘medium’ with shallow depth is inevitably becoming a bit samey. Don’t be a slave to shallow depth and don’t be afraid of deep focus just because you’ve got a fast lens. Composition is crucial no matter what camera you use. That said, I missed the GH2 in Japan and the signature compelling images that I can get from taking risks with large sensor video.

Andy Portch is a senior cameraman for Sky News based in Beijing.

Reports shot by Andy for Sky News have won multiple Royal Television Society and Foreign Press Association awards as well as the Monte Carlo Golden Nymph Award.

Posted on April 3rd, 2012 by Andy Portch | Category: Panasonic cameras, Panasonic GH2 | Permalink | Comments (12)

Redrockmicro selling Livelens adapter for EOS lenses on Micro 4/3 cameras

By Dan Chung

Redrockmicro have beaten Birger Engineering and MTF services to be the first to actually offer for sale an adapter which offers active aperture control for Canon EOS lenses on Micro 4/3 cameras like the Panasonic AF100 and GH2. Passive mechanical adapters which are commonly available have no way to control the aperture of Canon glass so the lens aperture is stuck wide open.

Based on the company’s original Livelens adapter for their Encore 35mm adapters it offers simple push button aperture adjustments in 1/3 stops- but none of the extra features like AF and Image stabilization that Birger engineering are promising (although their adapter still has no release date). The adapter requires 9V power in order to work but the company claim 20 hours operation with a single cell. There are a few limitations and compatibility issues so please read the tech specs properly.

For a limited time it is available at US $442.50, normally US $487.50 from the Redrockmicro webstore. There is no word from Redrockmicro about possible future versions for cameras like the Sony F3 or Nex range.

Here’s is a rip from the Redrockmicro site:

How does LiveLens mft work?
The LiveLens mft is a lens adapter that fits onto any micro four-thirds camera body, and provides a Canon EF lens mount on the other side for attaching any EF-compatible lens. an on board computer and electronics power a small control panel that allow you to adjust the aperture of the lens, open or closed, in 1/3 stop increments.

Does LiveLens do what I need it to do?
Absolutely. LiveLens technology has been used by many professional productions for over three years, demonstrating the reliability and capability of LiveLens. With a few exceptions it works with most EF-compatible lenses.LiveLens mft uses true active EF lens control technology, not fake extra iris, mechanical-only lens mount, or other non-performing poor quality “solutions” found on the Internet today.

How is it powered?

The LiveLens mft is powered by an external 9v battery, which can be switched on and off.

How long does the 9v battery last?
The 9V battery can power the unit for about 20 hours depending on how frequently aperture is adjusted.

Will this adapter work on all of my lenses?
The Redrock Micro LiveLens MFT will work on most Canon EF Lenses. However, there are a few exceptions. LiveLens mft does not power focus by wire lenses like the 85mm f/1.2 and 300mm f/2.8. It also does not work with Canon or third party teleconverters, extenders, or macro tubes.

How would I support long or heavy lenses?
If you plan on using long or heavy glass, we’d suggest a microLensSupport to ensure the lens is secure and properly supported.

Can I use the camera to control aperture?
Currently the lens aperture is controlled only through the LiveLens control pad, not the camera.

Will this power the image stabilizer of my IS enabled lenses?

Currently the LiveLens MFT powers only the aperture control of the lens, and does not provide power for image stabilization.

How does this differ from the LiveLens for the M3?
The underlying control technology of the LiveLens MFT and LiveLens for M3 is identical. Where the LiveLens MFT differs is it’s custom-built flange that attaches the unit to the Micro Four Thirds lens mount. LiveLens for the M3 has been proven to work for over three years in production environments and gives LiveLens mft this proven reliability.

Posted on September 21st, 2011 by admin | Category: DSLR video news, Panasonic cameras | Permalink | Comments (0)

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