Indeed I do! Gracias!I think you mean "cojones"...
Cajones are drawers (as in "chest of")![]()
Indeed I do! Gracias!I think you mean "cojones"...
Cajones are drawers (as in "chest of")![]()
I should also note the road of companies trying to appeal to smartphone users, with cameras that have a simplified interface and stylish body designs, is long and littered with corpses. This has not been a successful field.IMHO Sigma does NOT want to get misinterpreted with the BF. It is a camera for stylish ex-smartphone users, not for photographers, not for content creators. Video feature are nice to have but no signal in that direction.
Except the X100 series is kind of the anthesis of the BF - designed unapologetically for photography enthusiasts, styled after classic film cameras with a strong emphasis on manual controls. Even to the extent of mimicking their use of shutter speed dial and aperture ring, instead of the exposure control dial modern digital cameras use. The exact opposite of a streamlined UI centered on a large touchscreen and a few haptic buttons.Similar to the Fuji X100 vi. Nobody would think of this camera as a camera for hybrid shooters.
Leica introduced the first version of this 11 years ago at £1350It’s a pretty darn sexy camera. I’m glad Sigma has the cajones to release quirky cameras like this. It is fun.
Just watch, Leica will release a version of this for $6000.
but no video I've watched actually shows anyone touch it.
I have not seen any video in which soneone uses the camera at all.
The Bf has electronic stabilization for video.If this camera is intended to be a hybrid EDC camera, in that case I find IBIS or some kind of electronic stabilization (like in the Lumix G100) very important, because you do not carry everywhere with you a gimbal... For photography the lack of IBIS is not that dramatic, but for video is really convenient.
I don't think you can use it only with the right hand without a grip