ROL
Member
Well, I finally did it. I bought a Panasonic Lumix LX5, my first "real" digicam (manual everything, raw files). The idea is to keep everything as light and simple as possible for backcountry use and to be able to have reasonably good workable files and video most likely only for electronic display, the sensor not being sufficiently large to make decent prints. MF and LF film is for that. Two questions:
1) As I'm preparing for a 5 day hike and my pack grows to 30 lbs., I'm thinking of leaving the 1 lb. "toy" tripod at home, and freehanding it with the camera only. This would be the first time I've not shot on a tripod in over 15 years. Is the optical stabilization, given good light, sufficient to produce crisp pix for this, or other cameras of its ilk?
2) I'm trying to translate my film skills (I'm an unapologetic "Zoney") to the metered operation of this camera and its histograms. I do know how to interpret the histograms, and honestly the auto exposure modes do seem to do a good job on their own, with minor compensations. It's already been suggested that I just let the camera's auto functions handle exposure, but I was hoping for a little more intimate interaction with light than simply snapping pix. Tips, advice?
Thanks.
1) As I'm preparing for a 5 day hike and my pack grows to 30 lbs., I'm thinking of leaving the 1 lb. "toy" tripod at home, and freehanding it with the camera only. This would be the first time I've not shot on a tripod in over 15 years. Is the optical stabilization, given good light, sufficient to produce crisp pix for this, or other cameras of its ilk?
2) I'm trying to translate my film skills (I'm an unapologetic "Zoney") to the metered operation of this camera and its histograms. I do know how to interpret the histograms, and honestly the auto exposure modes do seem to do a good job on their own, with minor compensations. It's already been suggested that I just let the camera's auto functions handle exposure, but I was hoping for a little more intimate interaction with light than simply snapping pix. Tips, advice?
Thanks.