In the aftermath, this was a mistake, of course (no experience yet with on-line auctions!!) — not because I had been cheated dramatically, but this was a shop owner selling off his stock because newer and better models were lurking around the corner (and came out a couple months later). And of course I hadn't tried it out — but at that time this would not have helped because I did not have anything to compare with, nor had I even ever used our offspring's cameras. The latter would not have helped either, because the Coolpix 775 had an optical viewfinder, the Coolpix 5700 does not. Here are my findings and the camera's features:
- 5 MP sensor, 8x zoom lens (equivalent to 35 - 280 mm "normal" focal length), plus 4x "digital zoom" (i.e., built-in cropping, hardly usable), minimum distance 3 cm for macro photography; shutter speed up to 1/4000 s;
- An absolutely tiny, 1.5" (stamp-size), 100'000 pixel flip-out LCD in the back — ridiculous by current terms;
- An equally bad, 180'000 pixel electronic viewfinder — unusable for serious manual focusing, hardly usable in low light conditions (and no optical viewfinder to help out!);
- Zoom speed was OK, but focusing could take seconds — one had to be patient with this camera! If you were not used to it you were likely to take a photo before the lens was in focus — whomever I handed the camera (for a quick a shot with me on it) fell into this trap, and the tiny screen or the viewfinder were hardly suited to indicate how much out-of-focus a picture was.
- Needless to say: in low light conditions that performance was limited
- I had the original 32 MB (unusably small!) SD card, as well as a bigger 512 MB card — enough to keep any single day's production and more, assuming JPEG (see below, I took my laptop along on trips and offloaded the photos every evening);
- The built-in flash was OK, but hardly suited for good results (limited power, always pointing forward);
- Finally, I'm notoriously bad at reading manuals (i.e., I rarely ever do!), an so inevitably I found myself in situations where the camera insisted on popping out the flash where I did not want tit, or conversely, where it refused to turn on the flash where I really wanted — because I managed to maneuver myself (i.e., the camera) into odd "locations" in the menu settings, or by inadvertently pressing an inappropriate button; similarly, when I wanted to take a macro shot, I had forgotten how to switch to macro mode, and the camera would not focus at all ... :(
- On the bright side, that camera was compact and light (500 g), easy to carry along on trips!
Our garden in Uster / ZH, in winter Nikon Coolpix 5700, ISO 100, f/6.4 1/319, 10mm (39mm equiv.) |
- The Air '04, a military air show in Payerne, VD (51 photos, a challenge for the autofocus!)
- Walk around the Greifensee near Zurich (39 photos)
- May 2005: Southern France: Avignon, Marseille, Arles, and Tarascon (300 photos)
- July 2005: Finland / Finnmark: Porvoo, Helsinki, Hvitträsk, Sipoo, the Finnmark/NO, Lakselv, Kakslauttanen, Kaunispää, Varangerfjorden / Nesseby, Niilanpää - Kiilopää, and Rovaniemi (477 Photos)
- In August 2008, Lea also took the camera to the Hessenpark and Darmstadt, Germany (72 photos)
At that time I was using Apple's iPhoto for managing the pictures; iPhoto then did not read the RAW format from a Coolpix 5700, and I wanted to avoid an extra conversion step for importing, so I was taking pictures in JPEG format — not lossless, of course, but at least that saved me from having to add a 1 GB or bigger memory card (these cards were expensive, after all). I have since consequently switched to using RAW format only.
2 comments:
Du beschreibst sehr anschaulich und verständlich.
Es ist schön, sich wieder an frühere Gegebenheiten zu erinnern.
Ausser im Blog 1 und 2 - dort habe ich noch Neues erfahren :-)
Lea
I remember that Coolpix 5700 camera! Wasn't that the one that made those (colourwise) horrible pictures when Adrian and I were in Paris? Luckily, by that time, Adrian already had his second digicam which shot some good pictures...
Btw, I wasn't really happy with the Coolpix 775 cam (after the first few euphoric "I have a digital camera!"-weeks) either. When I spent Saturday afternoons with my YMCA-kids in the forest, the camera always insisted on using the flash. Consequently, the reflective stripes on the children's raingear were always VERY present in the photographs.
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