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LASplash.com: Photography Fuji S2 Pro Camera, Review By Marcel Indik
As a professional photographer, I was at first skeptical about going digital. In my experience, the quality of the images just didn?t cut it. I went to seminars for Leaf digital camera backs costing $25,000 to $30,000 each and there were major problems with moir patterns. I knew I wasn't going to jump in unless the quality improved.
With over 17 years experience with photo shoots involving people, skin tone is very important to me. I saw samples of images taken by the Fuji S2 Pro, was pretty impressed by them and decided to give it a try. Right out of the box, it was easy to use. The standard setting in JPEG Fine (12 Mpixels, interpolated) has plenty of DPI for large blowups, holding 229 shots on a 1GB CF card.
I was impressed with the quality of the JPEG images and surprised by the detail in the whites and blacks. Having been a darkroom 'specialist' for many years in printing from both color and B&W negatives, I understand the importance of having information on the film, i.e., over-exposure of negatives to impress the silver helide, and under-exposure of slides (positives) in order to get detail. I tried the same approach for digital: under-expose a bit to include the detail, then balance out the highlights, mid-tones and shadows to your liking in post-production (Photoshop).
I was disappointed to see the quality of the re-designed Kodak 14n. I had snapped and downloaded some images in the photo store, but they were grainy, glary and not-quite-sharp on the same JPEG setting. At $5000, Kodak can?t hold a candle to the Fuji S2 Pro. Photographers still complain about a camera?s ability to focus in low light. I have not had problems with the S2 Pro, finding it versatile in all light levels. In very low light, a small flashlight pointed on the subject completely alleviates the problem. The S2 Pro is the best digital camera I have seen for color accuracy, though I still maintain that skin color should be adjusted in post-production, i.e., in the printing for film and in Photoshop for digital. This philosophy offers the greatest range of realistic, artistic flexibility. With that said, I do not miss film. My $30,000 state-of-the-art darkroom is a dinosaur overnight.
Some more sample images taken with the Fuji S2 Pro:
Published Jun 11, 2004 © Copyright 2003-2004 by LA Splash.com |







