How I came to buy this little dynamo and some secrets on how to set it up for rapid deployment.

 

Let me start by saying I am a professional Photographer. I’ve been going strong as an entrepreneur running Mark Gilvey Creative since 2013. But I’ve been in the creative industry since the 1980s. I’ve made my special brand of art and photography for web design firms, ad agencies, government contractors, animation studios, photography studios, and even a small newspaper in a little town called Pottstown, Pennsylivania.

I told you that so I can tell you this. I’m scared $#@&less about taking photos of people, particularly when I don’t have a reason. If I’m on an assignment, I can take charge and dish out orders. But when I’ve got my “street photography” hat on, I quiver at the knees like a squirrel who can’t reach a nut. So it was important for me to look for a camera that would help me blend into the environment so I didn’t have to invade peoples personal space.

This blog post is not intended to be a product review. It is more of a pre-purchase and post-purchase field guide. My goal is to give you a list of the features I was looking for in an everywhere-camera. While that might sound like the obvious, keep in mind that I’m looking for pro features. Therefore I’m not going into what I call the “consumer” features. Second, I want to tell you how I am currently working with the camera with tips on how to set it up so you’re not goofing around searching for settings every time you turn it on.

But first, lets look at when this desire began by jumping back a few years.

The Day I Liked A Leica

Graphic of Leica corporate identityI spent the 1980’s drooling over the Leica M3. I remember the first time I held one. Surely you remember the first time you had a memorable experience holding a camera don’t you? I must be off my rocker. My friend Ron and I stopped by a Leica booth at a camera show that was being held in nearby Monroeville. They had several M3’s including the standard chrome body, a black one and if my memory serves me right, there was also an Army green version that had a motor drive/battery pack that hung down about 4 inches from the body—that was kind of an odd sight to see on a rangefiner. The rep said that they were the camera of choice for photographing in court rooms because of how quiet the shutter is.

Many people have fallen in love with with this cameras’ simple clean design and of course, the lens sharpness. But what got my heart pounding was the sound of the shutter! It wasn’t even a “click!” It was more like a “kih.” Not even a click! This thing was really quiet.

DCC Minox Leica M3

5mp (top) and 4mp version (bottom) of DCC Minox Leica M3. Minox even makes a twin lens reflex this size.

And so I walked away, wanting to have this camera for the next 28 years. Now that we are well into the digital age of photography and the M series is still going strong, I finally broke down and got my own, brand new, digital Leica M series camera for $200 while flying between Washington DC and Paris on an Air France flight. Well, that’s not entirely accurate. I actually purchased a camera from the same era that I also admired for its “James Bond” appeal; a Minox. In fact, this one was a replica of the Leica M3 in miniature. It’s called the DCC Minox Leica M3. The first one I puchased was 4mp. It would try to color correct everything, drank the energy out of the battery and had an LCD display that didn’t work that well.

DCC Minox Leica M3 with Flash

This is the back of the 5mp version. It’s so adorable!!!!! You can really look through the rangefinder but there’s no image adjustment. You can also rotate the lens to focus; you just don’t see it in the eye piece. I just wish the image quality was better but it was really made for the collector.

Then I purchased the next version, a 5mp which was a little bigger and worked a little better. They are fun little cameras. I even have a bracket flash for 5mp version. Unfortunately they don’t have near the precision that they should despite the excellent reproduction and moving, but not operating parts on them. The film advance would cock and spring back for example, but it was just for show.

The 5mp version has now taken its place on my camera shelf, aptly known as the Museum of Outdated Photographic Technology and the 4mp version is hanging on a lanyard that I wear like a pendant when I go to photography events. Below is a photo that will give you a better idea of the size of the 4mp version.

Later, I purchased an Olympus XA and then the XA-2. These were great little cameras because they were really small and had very quite shutters. Unfortunately, I didn’t use them that often because they didn’t have any manual override.

DCC Leica With Redskinettes-c

The two young ladies are Redskinettes. I photographed them holding my first version of this camera in 2006. You should see the camera very easily, it’s right there, see it?

THE QUEST BEGINS

And so, in 2014, the quest for a digital rangefinder style camera that looked and felt like a Leica M series had begun.

Why get a rangefinder style camera?

The reason I wanted this style of camera was so I could blend in—hide in plain site. I’ve been using DSLRs and SLRs for years. Once I get on a roll, I can get in someones bubble (while hiding behind the large DSLR body mounted with a 15mm ultra wide angle lens.) It’s easier in a crowd or busy environment but I cannot do that in a quite situation.

I’ve taken my DSLR gear around the world (well, not completely around, maybe ooh I’d say 25% of it) with me for many years and have taken some wonderful images with it. You can see some of them on this website. But during my most recent trip to Martinique, I had the opportunity to go to the top of Mt. Pelée. An active volcano that exploded in 1892. Now, there is a trail that goes up the mountain, down into the crater, across the middle of it, up the opposite side, around half the rim and back down. My brother in-law tells me it takes 6 hours to walk.

Mount Pelée

I photographed Mt. Pelée on this day with a Nikon D810 and an 80 – 400mm Nikkor VR zoom at 80mm. The photo took about 20 frames, all handheld. They were processed in Lightroom and stitched in Kolor Auto Pano Giga. The photo is about 7′ 6″ at 100% (300dpi). If I could get a rangefinder style camera that had an 85mm at the long end of an optical zoom so I could make these kinds of large panoramas, I’d be a happy camper.

But as I walked through the steep inclines within the towns I visited, I found myself panting just carrying a DSLR and a small pouch with two lenses. There was no way I was going to make it six hours with all this gear walking at steep angles. This, coming from the guy who says “who cares about weight?” Well let’s just say weight makes more of a difference when I’m not shooting on an assignment.

OK, yes, I haven’t been to Taekwondo class in a long time so I need to get my @$$ to class and build up my endurance and coordination. I also need to get on my bicycle and ride, ride, ride. So, it was probably wishful thinking that I would go up that mountain without rolling down it, falling flat on my face. Another time I think.

Fortunately (or unfortunately) for me, the peak was in clouds every day so the trek wasn’t going to happen. I was planing to go up with a 14mm and a 24-85mm zoom. I wanted to shoot a few of my mega-pans during the trek but I couldn’t bring my tripod because it was just too heavy—even though it was made with carbon fiber. So, a smaller camera that wouldn’t require so much effort but still had great image quality was what I needed.

The Search For A Leica-Like Utopia

While I was never a big fan of their SLR cameras in the 1970’s, FUJIFILM was looking pretty good on the rangefinder style front in the digital age. Their X-Pro 1 immediately got my attention with its design and interchangeable lenses, but it was behind the other technology that even FUJIFILM was producing. I know that many people are waiting for the next generation of this camera and were sad when FUJIFILM did not make an update announcement at Photokina this year (2015.) Then there was the X100T with its beautiful retro look and it had everything I wanted (at the time.) Even the X30 had great possibilities because of the flip-up LCD screen and good optical focal lenght—I really liked them all. But as I looked at camera features of these and other manufacturers, I had to ask myself how I was going to use it.

 “Self? How are you going to use this camera?”

I’m glad you asked. First and foremost is it will be used for street photography. Whether I’m getting in close to people with a wide angle (which I love doing once I get my nerve up) or photographing juxtaposed shapes and colors, this type of photography is the driving force behind the camera I choose.

Second, I want a camera that I can shoot panoramic images with. It needs a telephoto because that is the best way to get large-format resolution from a small format camera. You just need a program like Kolor Auto Pano that can handle stitching the images together. Photoshop doesn’t play nice with multi-row panos.

I’m not interested in shooting sports, products, or doing flash photography with it (now watch, I’ll get  gig where someone wants me to do that with this camera.) I’m not interested in shooting selfies because my mobile phone is faster for that.

This is not my first camera. This is not a beginning camera.

It is a camera for a specific purpose.

I think I hit everything.

MY RANGEFINDER STYLE REQUIRED FEATURE LIST for the STREET PHOTOGRAPHER

The first thing that appealed to me was a camera that would let me hold it at waste level and still see through the viewfinder to compose. Or in this case, an articulating LCD screen. I used to shoot with Hasselblad cameras that were held this way and since Vivian Maier used to shoot this way (and she’s the latest hot discovery in the street photography genre and many photographers want to photograph like her) it was a hot item on my wish list.

As I learned more about the different types of LCD screens, I decided it would be best to get one that had a screen that flipped upward instead of out to the side. This would give me the ability to look down into it and compose my shot.

To take the LCD screen requirement to another level, I looked for a camera that had a screen that would flip completely  above the top of the camera. I knew if I did any tutorial videos that being able to see the monitor would let me frame myself better. And I suppose it would look a little more natural if I glanced up, instead of off to the side of the camera (if the screen went to the side instead of above the camera body.)

That feature alone, pretty much eliminated getting any of the Nikon models. Their screens flip out to the side which makes their cameras look bigger than a DSLR and that interfered with my need to blend in.

I made up my mind that I didn’t need interchangeable lenses. I had a DSLR for that. In fact, if I could get a camera that had an optical wide angle (24mm) to short telephoto (85mm), I would be happy. I wasn’t interested in a digital zoom because the quality is just bad; really bad! When I shoot panoramas, I use an 85mm so the camera had to have that in its optical range so I could continue to make pans.

The camera also had to have a real viewfinder that you put your eye up to. I didn’t care if had parallax or if it was a video display of what was coming through the lens. I just wanted to be able to see an image in bright sunlight since LCD monitors can be very difficult. And I didn’t want to look like a zombie holding the camera out in front of me—BRAINS!!!!

I was also interested in something that had 16mp or more and shot in RAW. My Nikon D300 had 12mp which was a really nice step up from the 6mp Nikon D90 I have. But it wasn’t really enough so I thought 16mp + would be better. My Nikon D810 makes a 36mp image, it’s a lot of data but I don’t feel I need that much for street work.

A hot shoe (or a PC outlet) would also be nice because I could put a Pocket Wizard on it and shoot with studio strobes. Then I decided that I would probably never photograph with this camera in the studio since I had the D810 so I put that idea back in the closet. I could always trigger strobes using the on-camera flash and a light trigger (peanut) anyway.

The camera absolutely had to have full manual override. I still don’t trust automatic anything—particularly when a scene has a lot of contrast. I wanted to be able to control the aperture and shutter speed independently because I want to know what the camera is doing. I don’t expect the camera to automatically know when I want to shoot slow vs. a fast shutter speed. In addition, I have a personal exposure guide I use when photographing “street” (more on that below.) Also, with automatic settings, I have a tendency to just start shooting without thinking about what I’m doing.

I wanted to be able to custom white balance. Again, I wanted manual control. I’ve never trusted auto white balance. Like auto exposure, you never know what you are going to get in the next frame.

So I searched the camera store websites, did the YouTube crawl, and a couple of review websites. One camera kept coming up with really great reviews; the Sony RX100 MK III. It was pricy but in my eyes, even before purchasing it I could tell it was worth it.

THE DECISION WAS MADE AND UTOPIA WAS PURCHASED!

TSony-RX100m3-Front-Lefthis was it! So I purchased it from my local pro camera shop; PhotoCraft in Burke, VA. I love to get great deals on new camera gear by ordering on line but you’d be surprised how competitive local business owners can be these days. And, customer service is always better from a local merchant than from a website.

It’s not a true rangefinder but has the appearance of one. Ok, it’s a point-and-shoot that feels like a rangefinder. In fact, it looks like a miniature Leica M series camera. A couple of things made my heart race about this camera:

Sony and Olympus Side By Side

The Sony is the same width and a little shorter on the height as compared to the Olympus XA-2.

It is smaller than my Olympus XA-2 film cameras! Some of you may remember the XA series cameras during the 1980’s and ’90’s. That camera was the same size as a pack of cigarettes. The Oly would fit into your shirt pocket! The Sony is slightly smaller. Using “today’s” measuring stick, it’s about 15% smaller on the width compared with an Apple iPhone 5.

Talk about being able to blend in and guess what else?

Zeiss LogoIt also has a Zeiss lens!

It has full manual control, custom white balancing, full flip-up screen, 24 – 70mm zoom, and 20mp RAW files. Everything I was looking for in the RANGEFINDER STYLE REQUIRED FEATURE LIST—Whoop! Whoop!

And now for the extras that I wasn’t expecting:

  • 1080p video (which I’m finding very handy for documenting studio lighting setups)
  • Preset modes (will explain later)
  • Programmable buttons (so I can set the functions I want instead of a default setup that forces you to work one way instead of your way)
  • ISO from 64 – 12,500
  • Wireless image transfer: Camera to computer and Camera to iPad
  • Focus peaking (shows a highlight on things that are in focus)
  • Zebra pattern (shows where your highlights are and is adjustable! Very important when shooting manual so you don’t blow your highlights)
  • It has a BULB setting!
  • A shutter that goes “kih!” when you turn the sounds off!

What’s wrong with using my iPhone? It’s stealthy, with me all the time, easy to carry, and about half the price!

What are you? My mother? Get out of here! I’m talking about diamonds and you are talking about stones! That said, my iPhone does have two advantages:

  • It’s much better at making phone calls than the Sony is
  • The power cable that powers the iPhone will also charge the Sony 😉

AbUser Experience

So now that I’ve shot with it several times, I thought I would give you the real meat of this blog post. I’m going to give you the bad news first because there is so little of it and I think, it’s fixable.

Things that make me sad faced 🙁

Control RingThe control ring that rotates, and rotates, and rotates: The lens has a multi-function ring that you can rotate to operate the manual focus or adjust the aperture. It is very smooth to operate but the only issue is the ring has to be rotated waaaaaaay too far.

This badge indicates that there is an update related to the content you are about to read. The actual update can be see below at the UPDATE badge.Focusing: I have to rotate it about three and a half revolutions to get from one end of the focus to the other. It should only be about a half to three-quarters of a turn. Better yet, make it programmable! The long turns are good for fine focus but not when you are in a hurry. Make a short, medium, and long rotation setting; can’t this be done in firmware?

This badge indicates that the content that follow it is the update. 2015/03/19: I stand corrected. After working with the camera some more, I discovered the focusing mechanism is actually speed controlled. The slower you rotate the Control Ring, the slower the focus. You can turn it quickly and in about 1/4 turn get from one end of the focus to the other. Way to go Sony! Programming might not be necessary but there are those who might like an adjustable setting as an option.

Aperture: Since this ring also controls the aperture, you have to turn it the same amount to get from all the way open ƒ1.8 to fully closed ƒ11. That’s ridiculous!  Can that be fixed in firmware? I should only have to turn the ring, at most, half a turn. Make it happen boys! Luckily, I can also use the Control Wheel that is on the back which is much quicker but I’m not used to using it yet.

EVF - Electronic View FinderWhen I close the EVF, the whole camera shuts down and goes to sleep. What if I’m not finished taking photos? What if I just wanted to put the EVF down so it is out of the way? Can that be fixed in firmware?

Since they got rid of the hot shoe that was in the version 2 of this camera, a PC outlet would have been nice but I know I said I could live without it.

That’s it for the critical stuff. The Sony engineers really need to work out that control ring rotation limit. That would help make manual and aperture control quicker which will help me get photographing even quicker. Isn’t that what it’s all about?

The Super Colossal Coolness that is the Sony RX100 MK III

Back Top

I love the way this camera handles! It even feels like a real camera. It has some weight to it and doesn’t feel cheap in any way. I can pull it out of a pocket or hip pouch, turn it on and take a shot within seconds. I’ll confess though, I’m still learning how to find things. It has a heap-load of features which many new camera buyers will be interested in but I’m not going into here. I am going to address the features and set-ups that will appeal to my street photography brethren and those Pro’s who are looking for quality images from a smaller package.

HOW TO SET-UP THE SONY RX100M3 TO BE STREET PHOTOGRAPHER FRIENDLY

Programmable Modes (banks)

This camera can be programmed so it is set up with all your favorite functions right when you turn it on. Owners of DSLR’s may not have seen this type of feature before so check this out.

Imagine being able to set up several programmed modes where your ISO, starting ƒ-stop, shutter speed, white balance, frame rate, flash mode, and about 10 other functions are already set, ready to go. For example, my default setup out doors is RAW, ISO 200, ƒ-8 @500, 6500˚k. But what if I walked in doors? If I had a second memory bank setup for a slower exposure time (or higher ISO) already configured (or close to it) wouldn’t that be faster than having to think about all that stuff? The important thing is most of your controls are in the ball-park at the click of a button. If I know I’m going to be photographing both indoors and out, one of the banks will be set up with indoor shooting in mind and the other with outdoor shooting.

You can assign all these settings (and more) into any of three banks. Mine are currently set up as follows:

MR (Memory Recall) BANKS

MR BANK A: This is my go-to manual setup when I’m photographing on a sunny day. I use this bank as my starting point and employ my shooting guide (explained below: in FLASHMAN’S STREET PHOTOGRAPHY EXPOSURE GUIDE.)

  • Manual exposure: aperture is controlled on lens Control Ring or on the Control Wheel (on the back of the camera) by pressing down and select either Av (or Tv/Time) and rotating the wheel.
  • Exposure is set to ƒ8 @ 1/500 at ISO 200
  • RAW
  • Auto Focus-Single (with the option to focus manually by rocking the Control Wheel to the left)
  • Drive Mode: Single
  • White Balance: 6500˚ or I’ll do a manual White Balance

MR BANK B: I have been tweaking this bank to accommodate in-door photography.

  • Aperture Priority (aperture on lens, ring and shutter speed on Control Wheel)
  • Exposure is set to ƒ1.8 at ISO 800 (I want to shoot fast to minimize motion blur most of the time)
  • RAW
  • Auto Focus-Single (with the option to focus manually by rocking the Control Wheel to the left)
  • Drive Mode: Continuous
  • White Balance: Cool White

MR BANK C: In JPEG, I can get access to the high speed frame rates. In RAW, I think the fastest frame rate is about 5-6fps. This is probably fast enough anyway but in JPEG, you can get about 11fps…lets just say it’s really fast. The other thing JPEG is good for is wireless transfer to your mobile device. You’ve been there! You know something is about to happen that needs to go straight to your social media. Come on, give it up! You know what I’m talking about. I have this one set for daylight as well.

  • Aperture Priority (aperture on lens, ring and shutter speed on Control Wheel)
  • Exposure is set to ƒ8 at ISO 200
  • JPEG-Fine
  • Auto Focus-Single (with the option to focus manually by rocking the Control Wheel to the left)
  • Drive Mode: Continuous
  • WB 6500˚

I mentioned above that I have a guide I use for street photography. And now without further a due:

FLASHMAN’S STREET PHOTOGRAPHY EXPOSURE GUIDE

It’s not rocket science, it’s quick and dirty and it works for me as a starting point. I use this guide when I have the camera set to MR Bank A.

  • Outdoors in bright sun: ƒ8 @ 500th not matter where you point your lens. This exposure will keep your highlights that are in sun from blowing out.
  • Outdoors in overcast: ISO 200, ƒ8 @ 250th but it must be overcast, not partly sunny. If there is a mix of clouds and sun, use the exposure above so you keep the bright areas in check. When it becomes mostly cloudy or the subject is only in overcast light and you don’t care about the highlights, use this exposure.
  • Indoors: ISO 200, ƒ2.8 @ 60th (4 stops difference from outdoor in bright sun). This is only a starting point but will get you in the ball park. I may switch to my B Bank in this case.

HOW TO BE QUICK DRAW MCGRAW

PASM Dial

Photo shows the MR mode selected on the PASM dial. Click for enlargement.

Turn on the camera, (first button push). If you don’t already have the mode and settings you want, don’t mess with it,  just select MR  on the PASM dial (second button push) and then select an MR Bank (third button push) that is appropriate for the scene you are going into.

When you shut down, either leave it as is or return the PASM dial to a mode you use as your default—I usually select M. If you have your MR banks set up, this will be the fastest way to get back to your own customized settings.

Control Wheel on Sony RX100m3

The arrow shows the side of the control wheel where I push to access the manual focus.

Changing the Duma-Flotchi to a Whatcha-May-Call-It

There is also one adjustment I made to the camera usability. The control wheel on the back of the camera has several different functions based on what side you push it on or when you rotate it. I changed the mode that is on the left side of it so when I press it, the camera temporarily switches from Auto Focus to Manual Focus.

How do these presets help me take photographs in quiet environments?

Stealth my friends, stealth! I was experimenting with the camera one evening in a fairly dark room and kept noticing a red light on the wall every time I pressed the shutter to focus. It’s pretty bright and it’s noticeable. That tells me that someone could potentially see me focusing on them if I were photographing them in a dark environment. So I programed the manual focus to engage when I press the left side of the control wheel and I’m in business. I can adjust the focus, without drawing attention to myself.

Screen Flip

With the screen flipped up, you can compose without giving much indication of what you are doing. This screen flips completely vertical so you can view it from the front it even orients the image correctly. The screen also flips down so you could hold the camera above your head and compose.

I also had focus peaking turned on so I could tell what was sharp without having to put my face right up to the camera. Since I was focusing manually, there was no red light to distract anyone who might be across from me.

With the LCD screen flipped up a little, I could look down into it, compose and get the shot. With the sound turned off the camera goes “kih” which is a very good thing and no one but me can hear it.

ENOUGH TALK: TAKE ACTION!

Here is a photographic sequence I took in the Veterinarian office. I enjoy making short sequences; I don’t think that every photo has to be a one-hit wonder. Sometimes, telling the story in a series of images works just as well and it can introduce a whole new story based on the sequence you display them in. These photographs depict some very disconcerting activity taking place only 8 feet across from me. Click for enlargement.

“My Master—The Trader”

My Master, Trader (step 1)My Master, Trader (step 2)My Master, Trader (step 3)My Master, Trader (step 4)My Master, Trader (step 5)

I could not have gotten this sequence with my DSLR without attracting attention, and getting strange looks. Instead, I held the camera in my lap, covered part of the front of it with my right hand and my thumb on the shutter button while glancing down into the LCD. I set the manual focus using the focus peaking. I waited and took photos as events unfolded. Then I shut off the camera and covered it up with my hand until more activity began to happen and to recede my presence back into the background. Then I turned it on and continued taking photos.

I also learned a lesson at this location; don’t ever stop photographing! Continue to photograph until the scene becomes a new cut (to put it in movie producer terms.) Because the event you want, the one you will never foresee; will happen while your camera is off. When you turn your camera back on, you will have missed it already. But that’s another story for another post.

CONCLUSION

The Sony RX100 MK III is a solid piece of photo gear. It has reacquainted me with the roots of photography. This little camera gives me all the size and features I want to be able to photograph without having the camera do it all for me. Its file size is significant enough for the type of photography I want to use it for. This camera is very discrete for the street photographer and it packs pro controls. It provides DSLR image quality in a really small package. There are no weird artifacts like inexpensive point-n-shoot cameras have. I’m looking forward to working with this camera in all sorts of ways.

I’ll leave you with one more photo from the Veterinarians office. Click for enlargement.

“Safty in the Shark Cage”

Safe in the Shark Cage

This badge indicates that the content that follow it is the update. 2015/03/31

I have come up with some “formulas” for setting up the Memory Recall modes. Subscribe to my blog (top of the page, right side) to be notified when they become available. I will include a link here as well when that happens.

 

PRODUCTION NOTES: In case you were wondering, I photographed the Sony with my Nikon D810 with a 105mm macro and used Helicon Remote and Helicon Focus to shoot focus stacked images of the close-up views. The camera was cleaned and air blasted and there is still dust on it, even after spotting. I have a new appreciation for this type of product photography and I am a retoucher. Think I’ll try photographing my watch next.

The Ultimate Mobile Photography Workflow

The Ultimate Mobile Photography Workflow

Are you trying to figure out how to connect an external hard drive to your iPad? Do you need more dive space to save your photos? In this post, Mark Gilvey (Mark Gilvey Fine Art Photography) shows you how to bring a RAW file workflow to your iPad.