Well, one on the things that sold me on our little Olympus was the retro style. Makes a very nice shelf Queen.Personally, I do not understand the appeal of retro camera designs from Nikon. Personally, I wonder how well these sell relative to their modern counterpart. The Nikon Zf retails for $2K at B&H and the Z6III retails for $2.5K. Does Nikon sell enough Zf to justify the production cost? I assume that R&D cost is minimal because I would assume the insides are identical to a non-retro model.
So, you'll be getting one too?If there is a demand, why wouldn't Canon react to it, no matter what the concept's detractors say .
It would be a limited market, but such a camera could and would appeal to new customers.![]()
The Canon G7X, SX740 HS and a handful of other models like the Nikon Coolpix have gotten popular on TikTok recently thanks to their on-camera flash. Kids who only grew up with phone cameras are finding out how effective flash is for indoor party photos, sunset portraits and even as a fill flash during the day. It also makes their photos look distinct from people only using their phones.Could you please explain: "G7x is blowing up on TikTok". Honest question, I want to understand what you mean. Thx
Hmmm, I haven't seen a rangefinder camera like this with split screen, but I'd settle for the usual focus peaking type highlights...No autofocus would be interesting twist. The split screen could be replaced with similar size circle with 10x (or so) magnified center spot. NOT movable!![]()
If specs are like the R6 II or III, I will be more than just tempted...So, you'll be getting one too?
My in-laws were telling me how my brother in law recently sold his powershot for about the same price he bought it for a decade ago. They had trouble realizing that the "new generation" grew up with phones, not with an Olympus OM-2 film cameraThe Canon G7X, SX740 HS and a handful of other models like the Nikon Coolpix have gotten popular on TikTok recently thanks to their on-camera flash. Kids who only grew up with phone cameras are finding out how effective flash is for indoor party photos, sunset portraits and even as a fill flash during the day. It also makes their photos look distinct from people only using their phones.
If you search TikTok for 'digicam' or any old compact camera model you'll find hundreds of videos, mostly from young women, with millions of likes each, talking about the G7X and similar alternatives.
Prices of used models have surged as new models are hard to find. I recently sold a PowerShot SX620 HS for NZ$470, far more than it cost at the time I bought it lol
R-AE sounds nice... haha...Let see...
- 24MP sensor? Tick
- RF mount? Tick
- Retro styling with more knobs and buttons? Tick
The only thing to guess and speculate about is the name.
, I shoot with these old vintage film cameras.I agree the likely name would be an AE-1 tribute but suspect:R-AE sounds nice... haha...![]()
I like it but I suspect it couldn't be done since Leica Camera likely owns the trademarks on camera bodies named Rletter/number and almost certainly own RE since the Leica R-E is close and Leica RE was used in a lot of coverage at the time and Leica didn't object to that spelling.My vote is RE-1. But since I believe the AE-1 stood for Automatic Exposure. Does this mean a Canon RE-1 would stand for "Random Exposure".
And for those thinking that sort of thing doesn't happen, remember that in 1972, Olympus had to rename the M-1 to OM-1 after it was already shipping, recall and replace all M-1 bodies still in stores and replace all the marketing material when Leica thought Olympus M-1 was too close to Leica M4 and Leica M5.I like it but I suspect it couldn't be done since Leica Camera likely owns the trademarks on camera bodies named Rletter/number and almost certainly own RE since the Leica R-E is close and Leica RE was used in a lot of coverage at the time and Leica didn't object to that spelling.
Canon F1, Nikon F2 and Leicaflex SL/SL2 were simply the best DSLRs one could buy in film era.The AE-1 was my very first 35mm SLR, purchased spanking new in 1980, so it does occupy a soft spot in my heart. But as far as retro cameras go, I've already purchased and am shooting with a variety of vintage Canon SLRs including the Canon P, Canon 7, Canon FTb, Canon EF, and the excellent Canon F1 (the 1970's 'old' version) all in mint condition compliments of eBay. I shoot normally with an R5 (R5 Mark II on preorder), but for relaxing and savoring the process of composingView attachment 219004, I shoot with these old vintage film cameras.
Absolutely correct, sir!And for those thinking that sort of thing doesn't happen, remember that in 1972, Olympus had to rename the M-1 to OM-1 after it was already shipping, recall and replace all M-1 bodies still in stores and replace all the marketing material when Leica thought Olympus M-1 was too close to Leica M4 and Leica M5.
Earlier, Nikon had to sell their Nikon F as Nikkor F in Germany as Zeiss thought Nikon was too close to their Ikon brand. The only reason it wasn't world-wide and permanent was that Zeiss hadn't fought it when the Nikon brand had been used on rangefinders and only brought suit when it applied to an SLR.
And while the Canon's F-1 in 1971 was a close name to Nikon's F, you'll note that Canon never sold an F-2 or F-3, gave the updated F-1 the same F-1 name and only referred to it as F-1n unofficially and the replacement for the F-1 was not named the F-2 or F-1 something but the New F-1. Canon basically got told "you got away with this one name but that is the only exception you get" to naming something that close to a competitor's existing product name.