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-   -   Panasonic lumix g6, wow (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/panasonic-lumix-s-g-gf-gh-gx-series/518389-panasonic-lumix-g6-wow.html)

Noa Put November 18th, 2013 10:36 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Interesting, I haven't tested with 30p footage yet, so you are saying going from a 30p to a 25p file doesn't affect speech at all in Premiere?

Bill Bruner November 24th, 2013 10:38 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
As of this post, the G6 with the kit lens is on sale for $498 at Amazon. This camera is a steal at this price, in my view.

Bill
Hybrid Camera Revolution

Noa Put November 25th, 2013 03:20 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
I only find prizes back in the 650-700 range?

Bill Bruner November 25th, 2013 07:09 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Sorry, Noa. I had the wrong link posted. I fixed it in the post above, and here it is again:

Panasonic G6 - $498 at Amazon US as of this post (sadly, they are now on backorder - but you can order at the sale price and they won't charge your card until the camera ships).

Best,

Bill
Hybrid Camera Revolution

Bruce Foreman November 28th, 2013 01:45 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
$498 at B&H today (Thanksgiving).and in stock. With 2 GH3s, an OMD E-M5 and a GX1 I'll pass on this but whatta deal it is!

Noa Put November 28th, 2013 02:06 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Bruce, can I ask how your OMD E-M5 is holding up compared to your gh3's? I have seen some very mixed results from that camera, some images from a wedding shot with the camera I recently saw had some very beautiful colour/skintones but others with lots of finer detail where I saw the image falling apart due to the codec. Is that your experience as well? I"m thinking on getting that camera for beautyshots because of it's build in stabilization where I should be able to shoot with a 75mm unstabilized prime lens handheld.

Bruce Foreman November 29th, 2013 12:36 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
I haven't had a chance to really "wring it out" yet. But quick and crude handheld and walking tests are very encouraging. I plan to use it mainly for shots where I have to have the camera in motion and won't be concerned about leaves and tall grass waving in the wind. I envision camera motion being fast enough to where background elements would be indistinct with any camera, but I'll try to do a few slower to see if I can answer your questions.

The GH3 footage will definitely be superior but in most cases the GH3's will be locked down on a tripod. I'm going to try to get an "actor" and test out some "concepts" involving camera in motion (trying to keep up with actor walking) in low light environments with "fast glass" on the OMD. The Oly 75mm definitely qualifies as "fast glass", but my first tests will likely be with the Pan/Leica 25mm f1.4.

The menu system on the OMD is a "mess" and there is a learning curve unless you have dealt with the menus on other Olympus cameras. I had a Pen E-P3 and that led me around "by the nose" for several days, the OMD menu only took me about 3 days to begin to have some idea where to "hunt" for a configuration item.

I'll definitely let you know how I feel about the results when I get to do it.

Noa Put November 29th, 2013 03:36 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Thx Bruce.

Colin Rowe December 12th, 2013 05:55 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
I have just ordered a G6 with 14-140 3.5 to 5.6. Going for a very good price in the UK at the moment. £649 and a £100 cashback. looking forward to seeing just how good it is

Noa Put December 12th, 2013 06:15 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
That's a good price considering the lens is the same price as the body, around these parts at least. After selling my ea50 with stocklens including one nex mount and one canonmount lens I invested that money in quality m4/3 glass, like the 12-35mm f2.8, the leica 25mm f1.4, the olympus 75mm f1.8, the olympus 12mm f2.0 and one just for fun lens and for that one odd shot, the samyang 7,5mm f3.5 and last the 14mm f2.5 pancake which was the first lens I had. The gh3 will be equiped with the 12mm f2.0 on a steadicam, all the other lenses will be used on the g6, I like the fact that I can use etc mode in 25 and 50p mode, there is a slight resolution loss but with the glass I got you hardly notice that, especially with the oly 75mm which is very sharp and that becomes a 187mm f1.8 lens in etc mode or a 375mm f1.8 lens in full frame terms, great for those on the other side of the venue talking head shots. :)
In my case I got 2 camerabodies (a gh3 + g6) incl 6 quality lenses for a price of one canon c100 body excl lens, I consider that a good price as well :) As a bonus these m4/3 lenses are 1/3th the size and weight of aps-c or full frame lenses meaning my backpack has more space and weighs less, that difference I feel at the end of the day.

Nigel Barker December 13th, 2013 08:10 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Wow! That is a cheap price. That is a good lens especially for £100. The aperture is a disadvantage in dark venues but the reach is great. It means that even with the lens G6 is £300 cheaper than a GH3 body alone. g6 - Search Results - Wex Photographic

Noa, does that mean that you prefer the G6 if you are operating it? It seems a bit of a waste to just use the GH3 on your Steadicam. If you wanted a camera just for the Blackbird the new Panasonic GM1 looks like it would be perfect.

Noa Put December 13th, 2013 08:56 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
No I don't prefer the g6 over the gh3, it's a weight and iso issue, the g6 is much too light for my blackbird and I need to have a extra wheight solution that I will be looking into after my last wedding of the year tomorrow and it's a iso issue as the gh3 can go to 6400 iso as opposed to 3200 on the g6, it has happened I needed 6400 iso on the steadicam but I plan to add a videolight to the g6 on the steadicam so 3200 iso will do for those extreme situations where they turn down all the light during the first dance, I also plan to use an extra light on a light stand near the dancefloor that is remote controlled just to give that extra light when needed, the 12mm f2.0 oly will help as well but I know the focus will become very tricky.

I have seen gm1 test videos showing its better and cleaner then the gh3 in low light but that's yet another camera :) Allthough I would prefer the gx7 as it can do 50p but that camera is the same price as a gh3 body, overpriced if you ask me.

Nigel Barker December 13th, 2013 11:04 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
I hadn't realised how much lighter the G6 is compared to the GH3 (body only but including battery 340gm vs 550gms). I suppose that all you need is a 200gm slab of metal to add some mass to the stage of the Blackbird. The GM1 is just 204gms body only battery included - that's tiny! The GM1 doesn't do 50p though.

Why would you want a GX7 rather than another G6? The in body stabilisation doesn't operate in video mode.

Focus should be easy with the 12mm as the hyperfocal distance with that lens on an MFT camera even at F/2 is under 5m so everything is in focus from 2.5m to infinity. Unless of course you don't want a super deep DoF.

I have found using the Canon 5D3 at ISO6400 that F/2.8 always gave me decent exposure so ISO3200 at F/2 would be the same as there is always the possibility of dropping down to 1/30 shutter or an extra stop unless you are shooting 50p with 1/100 for a 180 degree shutter.

Noa Put December 13th, 2013 11:15 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
I need to add a batterygrip to the gh3 to get sufficient wheight for my blackbird so for the g6 I need to see how much weight exactly is needed. The gx7 has 50p and that's what I need for my steadicam work, slowed down steadicam moves look awesome for my trailers :) Haven"t seen any direct comparisons but it looks like the gm1 is cleaner then the gh3 at high iso's which would be the only reason to use such a camera for steadicam work + the fact that it's more expensive brother has 50p but like I said I think it's a overpriced camera.

Nigel Barker December 13th, 2013 11:31 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
The G6 has 50p so what would be the advantage of the GX7?

The prices here in the UK for body only are GH3 £849 GX7 £719 G6 £449 (£549 with 14-140mm lens) & the GM1 is £629 (including 12-32mm lens) so the G6 really is a lot cheaper than the other models.

Noa Put December 13th, 2013 11:36 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
From what I've seen it's a lot cleaner at high iso, only I"m not sure if it can do 6400 iso? 3200 iso however looked noise free on that little cam which is remarkable.

Pete Carney December 13th, 2013 06:13 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Noa, doesn't the Blackbird have a height adjustment for the gimbal to the sled? If I'm not mistaken, if you simply add a 15mm or so between the sled and the gimbal the lighter G6 should come close to balancing perfectly with the same weight. I've found a longer distance between the camera and the gimbal is essential for lighter cameras to be operated smoothly.

I have a new Olympus 17mm f/1.8 I've been testing on a jib pole stabilizer I've been developing. The combination of the ultra light G6 and that tiny lens is allowing some amazing stabilized images extended away from the operator by as much as 15' all hand held.

Here's some of my first samples with that combo.


Cheers,
Pete

Alex Anderson December 14th, 2013 12:04 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Pete,
I have been doing the same thing with a small canon eos-m camera and a small staedicam on the end of a handheld long pole. I am working now on using a small gimbal setup with brushless dc motors and a controller board from ideas I have form all the RC multicopters hobby stuff. I was starting to build a quadcopter, but I am finding about all these laws and restrictions they have for flying these things. You cannot fly one and get paid for the footage or use it commercially without permission from everyone who owns land in the area AND you need a certain license on top of that. BUT, they do allow anyone to fly them for recreation purposes. How stupid is that. The commercial flyer is more experienced and careful for safety. So I now hesitate building one cus a man nearby where I live was fined $10,000 by the USA FAA cus he sold some footage he shot in air flying a quadcopter with a gimbal and a small camera. His intention was recreational and later someone saw the footage and bought it. He now has a lawyer and goes to court to fight this first time case ever of this nature. Sorry, got OT here. :-)

I forgot, that Olympus camera with 5 axis IS would also be real good by itself with a gimbal handle on the end of a long pole, handheld..

Tim Akin December 14th, 2013 09:56 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
I'm searching for any setup advice for the G6. I just bought the G6 for my daughter and son-in-law who are expecting their first child. They know little to nothing about cameras of any kind. I do have a GH2 so I somewhat know my way around the Pany's. Should I just tell them to run in IA for both video and stills? I've been through the menu and changed a few settings that I know about but was wondering if some of you who have been using the G6 for a while could give any setup tips.

Man, I feel like I got real lucky when I made my purchase from Amazon (B&H was $50 higher at the time) for under $500 with the kit lens 14-42. I notice now it's back up to almost manufactures list and out of stock.

Nigel Barker December 14th, 2013 11:48 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Tim Akin (Post 1824382)
I'm searching for any setup advice for the G6. I just bought the G6 for my daughter and son-in-law who are expecting their first child. They know little to nothing about cameras of any kind. I do have a GH2 so I somewhat know my way around the Pany's. Should I just tell them to run in IA for both video and stills? I've been through the menu and changed a few settings that I know about but was wondering if some of you who have been using the G6 for a while could give any setup tips.

If they no nothing & don't want to stress over using the camera 'properly' then by all means tell them to use iA as it does a fantastic job. It's not just getting the exposure correct it's very smart in the way it selects the actualaperture & shutter speed http://www.panasonic.co.uk/html/en_G...604/index.html

Nigel Barker December 14th, 2013 12:01 PM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Alex Anderson (Post 1824357)
Pete,
I have been doing the same thing with a small canon eos-m camera and a small staedicam on the end of a handheld long pole. I am working now on using a small gimbal setup with brushless dc motors and a controller board from ideas I have form all the RC multicopters hobby stuff.

I think that R/C style gimbal with brushless motors is going to be the way forward. If you combine a handheld stabiliser like a Merlin or Glidecam with a simple 2 axis gimbal you could have a very cheap system compared to a $15K all-singing all-dancing 3 axis gizmos like the Freefly Store - Freefly M?VI

http://www.dvinfo.net/forum/stabiliz...steadicam.html

Noa Put December 15th, 2013 09:23 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Pete Carney (Post 1824329)
I've been testing on a jib pole stabilizer

That footage looks great Pete, do you have a photo from that jib pole stabilizer?

I know I can use a gimbal extender and I even have a shorter vertical tube but I don't like the super light set up as it makes smooth moves more difficult to achieve, it all becomes very sensitive to touch, that's why I like to add a bit of weight which helps from my experience to achieve smoother movements.

Below a picture of my set up I used yesterday at a wedding which worked very well, I added my g6 (that had a olympus 12mm f2.0 on it) to my mini shouldermount, it is attached to a quick release plate so I can easily take it of the steadicam if necessary. It looks a bit odd because it extends to the back so much but I can show you a real run and gun shot I did with it, see explanation and video below.

Just to explain what happened; I asked the manager when they where going to bring in the cake and he said: "soon, they are preparing it now", I thought I at least had a few minutes but when he left I saw in the corner of my eyes something sparkling, when I looked I saw a line of waiters holding a small cake each with a sparkling stick (or whatever it's called) that was being lit on one by one and when the stick started to sparkle the waiter started moving.

I had to run from halfway the large venue to get my blackbird which was in standby on it's resting stand, I switched the camera on, I pointed it towards a wall which was about 4 meters from me and pushed the shutterbutton to let the lens autofocus and lock to that distance, I adjusted my f-stop as the lightconditions changed since I last used the camera and I needed to set it to f2.0 and iso 800 ( I knew my sharpness would be limited to the first few meters in that way as I focused to a shorter distance so needed to stay closer to the waiters) and pressed record and started running to catch up with the waiters, in my haste I noticed I had my resting stand still open when I started to fly as the blackbird tilted down, you can hear it click into place att the beginning. Below you can see what happened as soon as I pressed record, I was in such a hurry you see the up and down walking motion in the beginning but once I got into the zone I did let it fly :D The waiter I let pass at the beginning was the last one in line, I waited a bit for her to have a starting point for my shot.

I spontaneously did the moonwalk after I nailed that shot. These type of shots are the reason why I have the blackbird and why I like it so much, especially in combination with the g6 now and the great oly 12mm lens. A bit of luck was involved as well as the timing for placing the sparkling candles on the tables and the position where they where placed was absolutely perfect.

As you can see there where some really challenging light situations. I had to set the whitebalance to auto as there was a mixture of daylight and tungsten colour lights and there was no way to have a "right" preset without the image looking odd depending from where I shot, at the start the image was overexposed due the overwhelming flood of pink high power spots that was positioned against the wall but I knew I had to set it like that as it was much darker in the rest of the venue.

password: test2

Nigel Barker December 15th, 2013 09:48 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Noa Put (Post 1824479)
with a sparkling stick (or whatever it's called")

From your description I thought they were going to be what we call sparklers (metal wire with firework material stuck to it) but looking at the video they are in fact Roman candles (paper or cardboard tube full of firework material).

Well done with the video. Those dreadful pink lights seem to be at almost every wedding venue nowadays. I really would like to try a Blackbird.

Bill Bruner December 15th, 2013 09:57 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Nicely done, Noa. Especially on such short notice!

Bill

Noa Put December 16th, 2013 03:48 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Nigel Barker (Post 1824481)
they are in fact Roman candles (paper or cardboard tube full of firework material).

It's good to finally know the correct English term :) They are used at almost every wedding here.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nigel Barker (Post 1824481)
Those dreadful pink lights seem to be at almost every wedding venue nowadays.

Especially this year I have seen these dreadfull lights (led) appear at a lot of weddings, it looks special seen through your own eyes but having only bright pink, blue or most worst red is killing it for video, I never know how to set my whitebalance, every preset I try looks even more funky, at the last wedding I even had to use 1/40th shutter to get rid of some grey stripes that would run from top to bottom on my screen. On my g6 screen it was also very hard to set the right exposure. For the first dance I asked the light technician to add some white light and that made all the difference.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nigel Barker (Post 1824481)
I really would like to try a Blackbird.

Here's another more controlled one I did when the venue was empty, the people from camera motion research have been very friendly and offer excellent support, for me it doesn't feel like they are located on the other side of the planet because they don't treat me like a number, a feeling I do have with some Belgian companies. :)
password: test

Noa Put December 16th, 2013 03:53 AM

Re: Panasonic lumix g6, wow
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Bill Bruner (Post 1824482)
Nicely done, Noa. Especially on such short notice!

I have seen some people questioning why they should get a steadicam because they think it will slow them down and it's yet another thing to drag around, I only use it starting from the venue at the reception, before that it is too difficult to use as I have to move to different locations in a short time and it's not practical as a soloshooter to use when you are covering a ceremony, but at the venue it's always on standby and now with the g6 and that small Olympus lens a great combo. These steadicam shots are used a lot in my demo's on my site and that's what is attracting my clients attention, the g6 also allows smooth slowmotion from 50p which is a feature also mainly used for my demo's, slomo just looks more awesome. :)


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