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Deleted member 19071
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Hi everyone, thanks in advance for any help on this. Always appreciated! After writing the below realise its a lot of questions. Soz!
So long story short, im looking to do more portraiture. I've been a sports photographer for a few years but enjoying working creating portraits, hopefully moving to do more brand work. The camera could be used outdoors with natural light but more than likely helped with some strobes. I'm unsure of which route to go with but hopefully in the next 6 months to buying a higher res/medium format camera for just this use. I am a Nikon user but not held to any company and guess anyway the lenses i own won't work without adapters (adapters any good in practice?) , i just want the right equipment for the job to do people and portraits. I have seen fuji/sony/nikon z7 (maybe add d850 too?)/hasselblad as potentials (anymore for the list?) but all in some ways have advantages and disadvantages for me. I'm aware the sony has amazing eye tracking tech, the z7 with great EHF, speed on focusing on Blad X1Dii reviews say is slow? etc. So much out there and hard to tell if the reviewers are being paid for review or honest???
I like the idea of the digital display showing exactly what you are going to take but have seen the fuji 50gfx 50 and looking through the viewfinder is like looking at a mid 90's video camera. Im genuinely shocked how bad it is but have heard z7 is good in comparison. How does the A9 1v and Blad look, guess its a lot to do with refresh rate and pixels?
If my piggy bank can take it I'd ideally get a body and a standard portrait lens but want to make sure its the right route first time. Hard i know as trends/tech changes but something i can use for 3 years and make money from without regret. Lens is of course a very important factor so suggestions on that too please? Just read that on medium format if i have an 85mm, that it goes down by a number to say 70mm? Sorry don't know the exact figures but heard it does this so as an example if I'm doing portraits and had a Blad, would it be better to get a 120mm so it reduces nearer to standard 85mm?
Thats a good start i think, again thanks for any insight and be good to hear from those who work creating portraits and your experiences.
Cheers, Col
So long story short, im looking to do more portraiture. I've been a sports photographer for a few years but enjoying working creating portraits, hopefully moving to do more brand work. The camera could be used outdoors with natural light but more than likely helped with some strobes. I'm unsure of which route to go with but hopefully in the next 6 months to buying a higher res/medium format camera for just this use. I am a Nikon user but not held to any company and guess anyway the lenses i own won't work without adapters (adapters any good in practice?) , i just want the right equipment for the job to do people and portraits. I have seen fuji/sony/nikon z7 (maybe add d850 too?)/hasselblad as potentials (anymore for the list?) but all in some ways have advantages and disadvantages for me. I'm aware the sony has amazing eye tracking tech, the z7 with great EHF, speed on focusing on Blad X1Dii reviews say is slow? etc. So much out there and hard to tell if the reviewers are being paid for review or honest???
I like the idea of the digital display showing exactly what you are going to take but have seen the fuji 50gfx 50 and looking through the viewfinder is like looking at a mid 90's video camera. Im genuinely shocked how bad it is but have heard z7 is good in comparison. How does the A9 1v and Blad look, guess its a lot to do with refresh rate and pixels?
If my piggy bank can take it I'd ideally get a body and a standard portrait lens but want to make sure its the right route first time. Hard i know as trends/tech changes but something i can use for 3 years and make money from without regret. Lens is of course a very important factor so suggestions on that too please? Just read that on medium format if i have an 85mm, that it goes down by a number to say 70mm? Sorry don't know the exact figures but heard it does this so as an example if I'm doing portraits and had a Blad, would it be better to get a 120mm so it reduces nearer to standard 85mm?
Thats a good start i think, again thanks for any insight and be good to hear from those who work creating portraits and your experiences.
Cheers, Col