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Shutterbug’s Exclusive photokina Coverage; Formats Aplenty, Printer/Camera Workflows, And A 3D Comeback:
The other pronounced “new” format, the so-called Leica Pro Format, is actually a 45x30mm sensor, yielding 37.5 megapixels, compliments of Kodak’s Imaging Sensor group. The camera to hold that sensor is the Leica S2, a complete system camera (or it will be when it starts rolling out in the summer of 2009) that will include various lenses, including a 70mm f/2.5, a 120mm f/2.5, and a 24mm f/2.8. The all-metal body will offer two shutters, one a leaf and one a focal plane, so both studio and field photographers will benefit. It is, I’ll grant, a true D-SLR form, but more in the shape and heft of a Pentax 67—if you remember that camera—which oddly enough was dubbed the “Texas Leica.” This might seem like so much marketing madness, but the evolution in size and resolution has other implications. While sensors get bigger, or pile on the megapixels, one thing is becoming apparent to scientists—how it is possible that the next generation of sensors might well outstrip the current crop of glass. There will be need for refinements in lens making, or image processing, or in both done cooperatively, so that the sensors do not over-resolve beyond the point that current glass can handle. Where is that boundary? Some say we are fast approaching it, given the super megapixel sensors, and that future software might not only deal with lens correction, but lens enhancement to bring the glass up to snuff. In other words, optics and software will meet and image processing and lens technology will go hand in hand. 3D Digital
What about prints? Fuji has drawn on their minilab experience to develop a 3D printing system using what they dub a “fine pitch” lenticular sheet, much like the old Nimslo prints in appearance. The samples we saw were reminiscent of past 3D images, and while it certainly will appeal to those few who miss the 3D prints of the past it seems more a passing fancy to me. But Fujifilm also foresees using this twin-lens technology for more than just 3D: for simultaneous wide and tele shooting, ultra-wide panoramas, and shooting movies and stills at the same time, without pause. Any takers?
But if anybody is shooting film, at least in the amateur sector, it’s news to Europeans, at least, who seem to brandish digital and cell phone cameras at every possible occasion for moments sublime, ridiculous, and mundane.
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