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PhotoExpo-East (2000): What did you see?


larry_huppert1

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I only had the opportunity to spend a relatively short time at the

trade show, but a few things caught my eye.

 

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1) Canham 6x17 back for his 5x7 metal field camera. It was a

prototype, but appeared to be a cleaver design. Motor driven film

transport. Uses standard 9v battery. If you connect a sync cord

from your shutter to the back, it will auto advance. Estimated cost:

$1000. ETA - Spring of 2001.

 

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2) Arca Swiss C1 Cube. Only one word to describe this tripod head

design - wild! The perfect LF tripod head. Under 2 lbs. Both quick

adjustments by moving in a particular direction with your hand, and

then fine micro adjustments via geared movements. Will allow you to

turn camera 90 degrees if needed. Panning is on top. Estimated

price around $1300 - ouch!

 

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3) Arca Swiss geared tilt. I forget what they call it, but it's

basically a geared orbix. Detents every 2 1/2 degrees. Control felt

nice. Can upgrade from standard orbix as the new geared control

makes use of much of the stuff that's part of the non-geared design.

Forgot the estimated price.

 

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4) Epson pigment printers (2000P & 5000P). I'd guess this is the

start of a real breakthrough in ink jet printing. Not only archival,

but also stable when exposed to water. Didn't see any glossy

examples, but the matt finish samples looked pretty nice. Looking

forward to exploring these printers in more detail.

 

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5) Cam Dynamics view camera. This is the auto view camera talked

about over a year ago. They estimate it will see actual production

next year. The non-auto version is around the same pricing as the

high-end Sinar, with the auto version somewhere between $10K and $20K.

 

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6) Colorblind Matchbox. Appears to be a very well thought out color

management suite of software. They are bundling a new

spectrophotometer from Spectrostar which can also be used for monitor

calibration. For reading printed targets, the Spectrostar device

automates the reading of all patches along a single line of the

chart. This makes the process of profile building much faster.

About $2K for the package. Other than the price, the other wart is

the fact that the device is serial rather than USB, and requires the

use of a converting dongle.

 

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7) Fuji announces NPS and NPL in Quickload format. No word on

availability of NPC in 4x5 yet.

 

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8) Kodak highlights new Readyload system. The person in that part of

the booth wasn't that aware of the TMX issue. They were also

suprised that E100-SW wasn't on the list (they said it was, and then

looked it up on the list and realized it wasn't). Wasn't impressed

with the attitude of the Kodak folks.

 

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9) Polaroid appeared to have a nice medium format scanner coming out

next year. Dmax of 3.9 (with multi-scanning), 3.6 normal. Support

up to 6x9. SCSI and Firewire support. I believe the estimated MSLP

was around $4K. Wish someone would sell a high quality value scanner

for 4x5, but didn't see anything (I guess the Imacon is a relative

value at $15K for what it does).

 

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10) Gossen showed a all-in-one meter called the Starlite. Pretty

much a Sekonic 508 clone, but I think it may be more sensitive (5

degree spot down to EV 0, and 1 degree spot down to EV 2.0 with an

ISO 100 reference). No display in spot viewfinder. Optionally

outputs light and flash intensity & luminance. Literature mentions

some ability to assign readings to zones - exact zone capabilities

isn't that clear. Flash/ambient reading function. Better than

Sekonic 508 (which can't do it), but not as good as Minolta.

 

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11) Lots of digital stuff. 4x5 scanning backs are very much taking a

backseat to single shot backs on MF cameras (w/ 24mm x 36mm

sensors). Lots of tricks being done. Phase One showed a device to

semi-automate doing three consecutive shots by shifting the rear of a

view camera which get stitched together to make a single 36mm x 72mm

image. Jobo, Phase One and Better Light were all showing their

scanning backs.

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One of the most exciting things to see, for LF photography, was the

new Schneider 80mm XL lens. It is very compact in size and has a

wider image circle than the existing 75mm Super Angulon. As one of

the Schneider reps said, "Progress marches on."

 

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Overall, this was a very interesting show, very informative and well

worth the time. LF gear on display included: Horseman, Arca Swiss,

Canham, Walker, Toyo, Wista, Ries, Ebony, and Hasselblad (ArcBody &

FlexBody). Both Walker and Canham were there in person.

 

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There is a new Gitzo carbon fiber tripod called "The Explorer." It

has greater flexibility than the existing mountaineer line (1227 and

1228 models). It is geared more towards 35mm and medium format though.

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