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Category: WhatPhotoGear


Some Changes at WhatPhotoGear.com - Coming Soon!

4 September, 2008 (03:08) | WhatPhotoGear | By: Josh

Stay tuned - there will be quite a few changes with WhatPhotoGear.com within the coming weeks and months!

We’re currently re-evaluating the direction that our humble blog has taken - and while we will still be bringing you updates on the latest and greatest products in the world of photography - we will also be working on more articles focusing on photography tips and techniques, and how you can best take advantage of all your gear!

Image Copyright - iMorpheus - Image used under a Creative Commons License

Image copyright - iMorpheus - Image used under a Creative Commons (Attribution 2.0 - Generic) License.

Image found on, and hosted by Flickr.

We will be back soon!

31 March, 2008 (17:11) | WhatPhotoGear | By: Josh

As you may have noticed, we haven’t posted anything in almost 4 days now - and well, unfortunately we’re running into a few problems with our blog, after a little upgrade over the weekend didn’t go quite as planned. :(

But the good news is, we are looking to be up and running again within the next 24 hours! So stay tuned! In the meantime, get your camera out of that bag and start shooting! Spring is here! Or at least I hope spring has arrived in your part of the world, it’s still snowing here..

The Olympus E-420: The World’s Smallest DSLR?

4 March, 2008 (23:09) | WhatPhotoGear | By: Josh

Olympus E-420 DSLR on WhatPhotoGear.com

And some interesting news from Olympus today - they have just announced what they claim is the world’s smallest DSLR - the Olympus E-420. And just how small is it? It measures 5.1 × 3.6 × 2.1 inches, and that is tiny indeed. The E-420 also tips the scales at 13.4 ounces, and Olympus claims that it is 20-40% lighter than most competing DSLRs. It looks like the promise of the 4/3?rds sensor of producing smaller and lighter camera’s is slowly (finally!) starting to come around.

You of course get Live View on it’s 2.7 inch screen, no surprises there since it was Olympus who pioneered Live View on DSLRs. What is more interesting though is the use of contrast detection to enable Auto-Focus during Live View, what this essentially means is that this DSLR will work just like your point and shoot - so all you have to do is half-press the shutter while using Live View, and Auto-Focus will be engaged.

The Olympus E-420:

  • The world’s smallest DSLR (and one of the lightest as well)
  • 2.7 inch LCD with Live View and on-screen Auto-Focus
  • 10 megapixels
  • Shadow adjustment - tries to open up shadow detail and will try to capture detail in (too) bright areas as well.
  • Face detection technology - looks for up to 8 faces in the frame and tries to lock on focus
  • Available in May with a body only price of $499.

Full Press Release after the jump.

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Photoshop and Truth in Photography

1 March, 2008 (20:00) | WhatPhotoGear | By: Josh

Is it a photograph, or is it digital art?

With the magic of Photoshop, we are able to manipulate our images in ways that are limited only by our imagination.

We can get rid of those skin blemishes in our portraits. We can totally erase that person who happened to walk into the frame just as we hit the shutter. We can transform a dull cloudy landscape to a stunning sunset image. The possibilities are almost endless.

But that also leads to a lot of questions from viewers. Was that full moon really there when you took that picture? Was the sky really that blue that day?

Some people dislike Photoshopped work, the argument is that this detracts from the “truth of photography”. There are purists who would even submit that any form of Photoshopped work is automatically digital art. I strongly disagree though. Photographers have been ‘manipulating’ photographs for years in an attempt to get the most out of their film. Photoshop is simply the darkroom of the digital age. Where before you spent hours tweaking everything in a darkroom until you come out with the perfect print – now photographers spend hours in from of their computers trying out different tecniques.

But I believe that Photoshop – just like all our other gear - is just a tool to help us improve our images. Yes, you should try to get the best possible photograph when you press that shutter, instead of settling for a mediocre exposure with the thought of improving it in Photoshop later. But I also believe that image manipulation software is an important, but not entirely essential, part of the photographic process. While it is certainly possible to produce stunning work without the help of Photoshop, it can also go a long way in making already impressive photographs even better. Even if it means just sharpening it up a bit, or just color correcting a bit.

Whether you use software to extensively change your photographs or just for simple tweaks, I don’t really care. All I’m after is the end product and your honesty. To me it is no different from my tripod, or my lenses, or my camera itself – it is simply a tool that helps us in saying what we want to say with our photographs. But, and this is the big BUT - do not ever use Photoshop to mislead others about your images. Do not lead others into thinking that the sunset was really that color, or that the full moon was really there that night if it wasn’t. If you changed the colors, erased something or cloned some pixels, then say so.

To me photography is always about invoking emotion. If an image manages to grab me and make me want to take everything in, then that’s really all that matters. But if I am led to believe that a photograph was taken as is and I later find out that it was in fact Photoshopped or staged – then that is another thing altogether.

Welcome to WhatPhotoGear dotcom

24 February, 2008 (18:03) | WhatPhotoGear | By: Josh

So what do we aim to accomplish with WhatPhotoGear.com? Well, just like the name says, the focus will be on all that shiny gear that helps us make pictures. We hope to cover news, churn out some reviews, show you tips and tricks and etc and etc.. But we’re not just limiting ourselves to the latest super duper ultra mega pixel DSLR or the just released, ultra-thin and available-in-6-different-colors point and shoot - but we’re also going to cover tripods and heads, bags, lenses and all those other gear that most other photography gear websites tend to overlook.

But just a bit of a disclaimer here - I do subscribe to the your camera and all your gear is all secondary school of thought - and I’m sure most of us do. After all, there are numerous photographers out there with their little point and shoots and entry level DSLRs producing better photographs than those lugging around thousands of dollars worth of gear.

But at the same time, I don’t totally follow the your camera and gear don’t matter school of thought either. I will readily recommend that everyone purchase the best gear we can afford - but I also believe that all our gear are simply tools to help us in making better photographs. Good gear should go hand in hand with a good photographic eye and a good grasp of the basics.

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