ugggggg... Said it before and will say it again. My response to all this is to stop sending my clients a proof gallery, and instead, send my shots to a lab where they will analyze it and send me a 500 page detailed report on the image, with histogram graphs and 3lots of science and tech info ---then i will pass this 500 page report to my clients and they can choose their prints from that...
Yes, thats really sarcastic, but from what I see and hear here it sounds like thats what your clients want, or you want. Who cares about the actual image in question... theres a lot of math in photography, and in music and in art --- but are most artists mathematicians? Does an artist bust out a graphing calculator before they envision the image they wish to create?
There is another segment of market research here to consider ---and this i think will drive what happens in the professional market more than forum posts ---where are the images going, what are people doing with them. If more national geographic pictures have canon gear attached to them than nikon, then why would canon spend a boat load of r&d money on improving DR? If more acclaimed artists are selling more printed works off of canon gear, then again why spend r&d $$$? And then theres the wedding photography market ---which is really what the mk3 is geared too ---for that yeah nikon may have more wow results from the day time part of the ceremony, but even nikon pros who have used the mk3 praise its low light abilities and admit that canon has the edge there. That's what will drive the pro market...
But with all that said, the rebel line and the nikon equivalent, that's whats really making both canon and nikon cash. And in that race, hate to say it, MP's will win over anything else, because most people buying a rebel don't even know what DR is, or why it matters. MP's though, we know thats important because it says it on the box!!!
Sad to say it, but in terms of profit, its the low end that wins. For the higher end pro/emerging pro market, its more about prestige - look at this wow shot by so and so taken on a such and such...
Lastly, I should remind all of you of these 2 videos -
Canon 5D MK III vs Nikon D800 with Nathan Elson
Canon 5D Mark III vs. Nikon D800 Part 2 with Mike Drew
Bottom line of both of these videos is ----if you are already on canon, there really isn't any need to switch, and, if your already on nikon, there is no need to switch ----overall consensus, most people would be more than happy with either camera.
Anyway you hack it though, it brings me back to the very sarcastic beginning ---if your meeting with a client, arethey going to look at your images and feel you out as a person? Or are they going to ask you about DR, or ask to see a DxO report on your camera, or an MFT chart on your lenses? I don't think I'm too far off in saying that for most people in most fields of photography a client chooses them based on the images in the portfolio, the personality of the tog, and the cost for the session/disk/prints.
Yes, thats really sarcastic, but from what I see and hear here it sounds like thats what your clients want, or you want. Who cares about the actual image in question... theres a lot of math in photography, and in music and in art --- but are most artists mathematicians? Does an artist bust out a graphing calculator before they envision the image they wish to create?
There is another segment of market research here to consider ---and this i think will drive what happens in the professional market more than forum posts ---where are the images going, what are people doing with them. If more national geographic pictures have canon gear attached to them than nikon, then why would canon spend a boat load of r&d money on improving DR? If more acclaimed artists are selling more printed works off of canon gear, then again why spend r&d $$$? And then theres the wedding photography market ---which is really what the mk3 is geared too ---for that yeah nikon may have more wow results from the day time part of the ceremony, but even nikon pros who have used the mk3 praise its low light abilities and admit that canon has the edge there. That's what will drive the pro market...
But with all that said, the rebel line and the nikon equivalent, that's whats really making both canon and nikon cash. And in that race, hate to say it, MP's will win over anything else, because most people buying a rebel don't even know what DR is, or why it matters. MP's though, we know thats important because it says it on the box!!!
Sad to say it, but in terms of profit, its the low end that wins. For the higher end pro/emerging pro market, its more about prestige - look at this wow shot by so and so taken on a such and such...
Lastly, I should remind all of you of these 2 videos -
Canon 5D MK III vs Nikon D800 with Nathan Elson
Canon 5D Mark III vs. Nikon D800 Part 2 with Mike Drew
Bottom line of both of these videos is ----if you are already on canon, there really isn't any need to switch, and, if your already on nikon, there is no need to switch ----overall consensus, most people would be more than happy with either camera.
Anyway you hack it though, it brings me back to the very sarcastic beginning ---if your meeting with a client, arethey going to look at your images and feel you out as a person? Or are they going to ask you about DR, or ask to see a DxO report on your camera, or an MFT chart on your lenses? I don't think I'm too far off in saying that for most people in most fields of photography a client chooses them based on the images in the portfolio, the personality of the tog, and the cost for the session/disk/prints.
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