This is so much more interesting than just a 'retro gear review'. Adding the interviews with the journalists was a great thing and the stories really bring this alive. Great story, good job.
one has to agree, camerastoreTV blows every other camera review chanel out of the water. In love with your work guys. Plus you make calgary look like the best place to live.
Absolutely. They make the most informative, objective, professional, down-to-earth, and all around most watchable videos. I like other channels too, but when I want a straight-up honest review I come here.
This brings back memories. I bought an NC2000e with my own money and used it to convince my newspaper to convert to digital photography. What a great time of my life.
Awesome video guys, more like this please! It was also great to see Rob Galbraith again, I was a big fan and follower of his site from the very beginning. I hope you bring him back again in future videos! Cheers!
If you're after camera suggestions for the Yesteryear series how about Epson's (brief) foray into interchangeable lens cameras with the R-D1. I actually owned one briefly back in Jan 2005 but traded it in for the much more sensible Canon 20D (the rangefinder patch on the Epson was a touch on the small side for my liking). BTW it used a CCD sensor from 2002. Oh and some people allege it was the first mirrorless camera... (I don't miss the camera, the 20D was just plain excellent so no regrets, but I sometimes wish I'd kept the Voigtländer lenses.)
Thanks for sharing - this is a cool series - I started shooting film in the '60s and digital around 2000 (Nikon Coolpix 990) - this brought back fond memories
Wow, $17,000 for that camera when it was new. My, how technology flies! I remember my first little digital compact camera, a 3 megapixel Olympus Stylus around 2003, cost me about $350. Last year I bought a 24 megapixel Sony A6000 for about $400 (open box item at Best Buy! Woot!) God I love technology advancements!!
I remember using the Kodak DCS420 in the mid 90's and we would use a hot mirror filter to alleviate some of the issues you were having with the NC2000.
Great series! I myself started with the Kodak DCS760 and DCS720X back in 2008 and went backwards over the DCS620X and DCS620 to the DCS420. I'm still using them all. Mostly the X type models with the CMYK "Xena" Sensors. They still do a great job up to around 2000 ISO and the F5 bodies are simply great in speed and handling. Image preview and the overall operation is stunningly fast. I even like them more than my D3 in terms of ergonomics and simplicity.
I saw this...had to watch....remember this. Such an important camera for KODAK. Glad to see KODAK still makes some cameras. I bet people did hate this camera.
could i suggest a Nikon D1x? I've got 2 of these and some of the images are stunning but the age gap really does tell... loved the video and subscribed
Used one of these when I worked for the Birmingham Post around 1999-2002, as horrible as the video shows. Purple files, blown highlights and slow motorwind, it really was worse then shooting transparency. TTL flash never worked and I lost a lot of confidence in my abilities as a press photographer. Took about 6 months to get used to it. Still never really cracked sport with it, it had delay on the shutter so you had to press the shutter before the action happened, in the wild hope you got the action. Think I got loads of legs on the edge of frames..There was also a massive problem in sending the files back to the office..took forever...Landline at 56k was the superfast option...
What a great series! There are so many interesting cameras from the past: Leaf DCB1, Nikon D2h, Olympus E-1, Kodak Dcs 14, Canon D30, just to name a few.
Seriously this must be the best channel not just on RUclips but on all forms of media, but only if your into your photography of course, How about some videos on flashes, bags and tripods next?
the images are very good. I bought my first digital camera back in this era. It was a Kodak 1 megapixel. It took beautiful images. Did not have the resolution to make large prints. I loved it from day one... making me much smarter than all these other photographers.
Radio Control enthusiasts have used self-made external battery packs since the early 2000s in order to fly/race/whatever all day without having to charge the radio controller until they got home.
Can you "review" the Sony Mavica. My first digital camera wrote to 3.5 inch floppy disks. It was useless for anything else than the stop motion I used it for.
I shot with the NC2000 and NC2000e (the “e” was the slightly improved version) I recall the camera bodies costing around $16,000 apiece. The quality was as horrible as the battery. At the time we were shooting color negatives and scanning them into our Macintosh with a Kodak Rapid Film Scanner. (Such as the RFS 3570) In addition to the PCMCIA cards and card readers that used SCSI ports, it only produced their own version of a RAW file (no jpegs) and required a special Photoshop plug-in to read them as Photoshop didn't recognize the file format on its own. Part of the cost was that it came with support from AP at big events. Something I found to be worthless when at the Oscars one year, the camera stoped working. The AP repair/representative said that the computer board inside the camera came loose and said that was a common problem with that camera. I asked him if he could fix it and he said sure, but he didn’t have the tool to get into the camera. So we were on our own and had to come up with an emergency backup plan to shoot the Academy Awards that year with film. No one on staff liked using that camera and it sat in the pool locker for most of the year.
I own a Kodak DCS Pro SLR/n, and it has a beautiful 13.5MP Full-Frame CMOS sensor, the HDR is great, and gives beautiful detailed pictures. (no need for bracketing and editing to HDR!!) Not a good camera for low light, if you raise the ISO it gets really grainy, but in nice daylight, it's a beautiful camera to use!! Batteries drain fast, and it's pretty slow, but in its time it was a great camera, and still is actually.
I just picked up a F90x and it's a great film body especially for manual focus. 20 years from now I will be shooting it and my other film cameras, but my DSLR will be useless. nice video
Great video guys, I love that you guys are looking at these unsung hero cameras that in some form have helped to shape the products and overall photography industry today. Shows the progress that the field of photography has experienced, and also funny that people still complain in regards to image quality still these day's especially considering where it all started, and how revolutionary it was and still is in interconnecting people from all over the world. Really excited to be apart of the contest for the beautiful Fujifilm s5 pro, I've always wanted to play around with one as the colours produced from fuji's sensor is so unique, and has in a way an indescribable beauty. others can take a look at various image samples on flickr. also on a side note the Link to the google form isn't working as also noted by other viewers.
Hi guys !! I am learning Photography !! Using my beloved deceased brothers Fiji S5 !! He shot my wedding in Bali 2007 and passed 2008 !! I haven't really used his gear as so complicated! I have a new Nikon ! But want to use his camera
Definitely liking the retrospective. If nothing else, it's a great reminder of how quickly we've progressed and what we take for granted now. Maybe I'll go take my Canon 350D along with my Nikon D800E next time I go out. Or my Canon S110.... No, not that one, the 2001 Digital Elph.
Curiously enough this was the first digital camera I ever got my hands on, back in 1995, as a work experience student assisting a department store catalogue shoot. Got to fire off a few frames of folded towels!!! Still, being allowed to use a $12K camera at the age of 15 was a thrill. I wouldn’t see/touch another digital camera until 1998… that was an Apple QuickTake 150, much less impressive! 😂
+Mehdi Bakkali We've been unable to duplicate it, so it's hard to tell. I suspect it was an issue with the FS5's electronic ND. I'll update if I can figure it out. Jordan @ TCSTV
Hey guys - great video :) I found very recently old MInolta XG7 and started shooting film a bit - really rewarding experience,I must add :) Any chance of doing that review as well? Also may a comprehensive video about films for us younger photographers junst to see difference from film to film to see which one we could try :) thanks
I understood that those cameras were F series 35mm film cameras converted to digital. Not sure though. They were around $5k at the time so I later bought an Olympus E-10 which was much better at 4.1 megapixels but it ate AA batteries. Still have it.
I still shoot film and the Nikon N90s / F90x is my favorite camera. I bought one last month for $40 in mint condition. No need to pay hundreds for an F100 or F5.
@Jordan , What was all that flickering about, from a technical point of view. It shows up again at 4:07. Nice video though! :) Keep the good work, guys!
+Felipe Sandoval We haven't been able to duplicate the issue, so we don't know for sure what caused it. I suspect it might have something to do with the electronic ND filter on the Sony FS5. Jordan @ TCSTV
it would be interesting to see a comparison between this and canons first digital slr, just to see how things progressed in that short time span (like the d2000 or 1d)
This is so much more interesting than just a 'retro gear review'. Adding the interviews with the journalists was a great thing and the stories really bring this alive. Great story, good job.
love the old camera review series
Instablaster...
one has to agree, camerastoreTV blows every other camera review chanel out of the water. In love with your work guys. Plus you make calgary look like the best place to live.
Absolutely. They make the most informative, objective, professional, down-to-earth, and all around most watchable videos. I like other channels too, but when I want a straight-up honest review I come here.
Not digitalrev tho
"Hi, this is Jordan the video guy. This camera has the same video features as the Nikon Df. Thanks."
Hey, I love the video features on my Df.
I know that quote but I can't remember where it came from. Send help.
160% view finder coverage! Cant get that nowadays haha
It's almost like the SLR version of a Leica rangefinder with framelines.
agogobell28 exactly
+Rodrigo Vazquez sure you can, just shoot your stuff and crop all the images.
***** That's not how this works buddy
Rodrigo Vazquez Of course it is.
This is my favorite series on this channel
This brings back memories. I bought an NC2000e with my own money and used it to convince my newspaper to convert to digital photography. What a great time of my life.
What I take home from this video is that the Kodak Ektar 100 film is just gorgeous!
Great to see and hear Rob Galbraith :)
Awesome video guys, more like this please!
It was also great to see Rob Galbraith again, I was a big fan and follower of his site from the very beginning. I hope you bring him back again in future videos!
Cheers!
That bird at 11:36 ... "What are these humans on about?"
Another great video! Thank you, very interesting and nostalgic
I love this Unsung Cameras of the Yesteryear series!
We just don't know how good we have it these days. Well now we know.lol Thanks for the journey back.
This is my favorite series on this channel !!
i wish fuji have something with this styling. will be v nostalgic
Nice now can we pulleez...pulleez get your fantastic GX80 review!
Realy cool, thank you for doing this series!!
If you're after camera suggestions for the Yesteryear series how about Epson's (brief) foray into interchangeable lens cameras with the R-D1. I actually owned one briefly back in Jan 2005 but traded it in for the much more sensible Canon 20D (the rangefinder patch on the Epson was a touch on the small side for my liking). BTW it used a CCD sensor from 2002. Oh and some people allege it was the first mirrorless camera...
(I don't miss the camera, the 20D was just plain excellent so no regrets, but I sometimes wish I'd kept the Voigtländer lenses.)
This video was amazing. Thank you Chris and Jordan!
keep these vids comin! so fun to learn about cameras that were made in the past.
Thanks for sharing - this is a cool series - I started shooting film in the '60s and digital around 2000 (Nikon Coolpix 990) - this brought back fond memories
The purple fire and Christmas light glares are oddly stunning.
Wow, $17,000 for that camera when it was new. My, how technology flies!
I remember my first little digital compact camera, a 3 megapixel Olympus Stylus around 2003, cost me about $350. Last year I bought a 24 megapixel Sony A6000 for about $400 (open box item at Best Buy! Woot!)
God I love technology advancements!!
Many of the $8000 digital SLRs these days will be worth a couple of hundred on the used market next decade.
I remember using the Kodak DCS420 in the mid 90's and we would use a hot mirror filter to alleviate some of the issues you were having with the NC2000.
This is awesome ... can't wait to see the next episodes
Please make more of these, very cool! Also, would be great to see more old film cameras too.
What a great video, its nice to see some history, ive always wanted to see those titans in action!
Great series! I myself started with the Kodak DCS760 and DCS720X back in 2008 and went backwards over the DCS620X and DCS620 to the DCS420. I'm still using them all. Mostly the X type models with the CMYK "Xena" Sensors. They still do a great job up to around 2000 ISO and the F5 bodies are simply great in speed and handling. Image preview and the overall operation is stunningly fast. I even like them more than my D3 in terms of ergonomics and simplicity.
kodak ektar 100 is awesome film
Ektar 24 for sunsets..... drool.....
I saw this...had to watch....remember this. Such an important camera for KODAK. Glad to see KODAK still makes some cameras. I bet people did hate this camera.
I remember having similar conversations with the Magnum photographers when I worked there. Very cool that you are doing this.
could i suggest a Nikon D1x? I've got 2 of these and some of the images are stunning but the age gap really does tell... loved the video and subscribed
As someone who loves both photography gear and obsolete tech, thank you very much for this video! :D
this is awesome, hope to see more of this series :)
Awesome presentation! Want to see more...
Loved Rob's website. I miss it really. Good to see him alive and well :)
Used one of these when I worked for the Birmingham Post around 1999-2002, as horrible as the video shows. Purple files, blown highlights and slow motorwind, it really was worse then shooting transparency. TTL flash never worked and I lost a lot of confidence in my abilities as a press photographer. Took about 6 months to get used to it. Still never really cracked sport with it, it had delay on the shutter so you had to press the shutter before the action happened, in the wild hope you got the action. Think I got loads of legs on the edge of frames..There was also a massive problem in sending the files back to the office..took forever...Landline at 56k was the superfast option...
What a great series! There are so many interesting cameras from the past: Leaf DCB1, Nikon D2h, Olympus E-1, Kodak Dcs 14, Canon D30, just to name a few.
You guys should review film cameras and how to get into film photography and which films to use to get the best pictures
Seriously this must be the best channel not just on RUclips but on all forms of media, but only if your into your photography of course, How about some videos on flashes, bags and tripods next?
This is the best episode ever
Great vid :) Thanks for the work, guys!
the images are very good. I bought my first digital camera back in this era. It was a Kodak 1 megapixel. It took beautiful images. Did not have the resolution to make large prints. I loved it from day one... making me much smarter than all these other photographers.
Fantastic Video! Thanks For Sharing!
i'm quite impressed with the image quality
Nice little birdie spying on you guys at 11:36 :))
Chris, great video. Thank you. Do you remember the Minolta RD-175 in 1995? At the time, it was state-of-the-art.
love the stories from the photographers
camera rookies would love that rig. the size makes it look uber professional as they'd say
Radio Control enthusiasts have used self-made external battery packs since the early 2000s in order to fly/race/whatever all day without having to charge the radio controller until they got home.
Can you "review" the Sony Mavica. My first digital camera wrote to 3.5 inch floppy disks. It was useless for anything else than the stop motion I used it for.
I shot with the NC2000 and NC2000e (the “e” was the slightly improved version) I recall the camera bodies costing around $16,000 apiece. The quality was as horrible as the battery. At the time we were shooting color negatives and scanning them into our Macintosh with a Kodak Rapid Film Scanner. (Such as the RFS 3570) In addition to the PCMCIA cards and card readers that used SCSI ports, it only produced their own version of a RAW file (no jpegs) and required a special Photoshop plug-in to read them as Photoshop didn't recognize the file format on its own. Part of the cost was that it came with support from AP at big events. Something I found to be worthless when at the Oscars one year, the camera stoped working. The AP repair/representative said that the computer board inside the camera came loose and said that was a common problem with that camera. I asked him if he could fix it and he said sure, but he didn’t have the tool to get into the camera. So we were on our own and had to come up with an emergency backup plan to shoot the Academy Awards that year with film.
No one on staff liked using that camera and it sat in the pool locker for most of the year.
Very interesting video guys...this channel rocks!!
I own a Kodak DCS Pro SLR/n, and it has a beautiful 13.5MP Full-Frame CMOS sensor, the HDR is great, and gives beautiful detailed pictures. (no need for bracketing and editing to HDR!!) Not a good camera for low light, if you raise the ISO it gets really grainy, but in nice daylight, it's a beautiful camera to use!! Batteries drain fast, and it's pretty slow, but in its time it was a great camera, and still is actually.
a good video like the old camera for my collection
Hey dude this is absolutely perfect keep going!!!!
Oh yeah, that flicker when he's sitting on the stairs is weird. Maybe you had a silent helicopter right overhead. :)
Please more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more classic cameras review!
I just picked up a F90x and it's a great film body especially for manual focus. 20 years from now I will be shooting it and my other film cameras, but my DSLR will be useless. nice video
Love this analog series. You guys should teach a class yourselves!
+Simi Not analogue - old digitals. I think you are getting your YT channels confused :-)
I love these weird old cameras. I have a dcs420 that I use all the time. Sure its nowhere near perfect, but that's what I love about it.
best series to date
One of the old Sigma SD DSLR´s would be interesting, with the crazy blue (if I would be in Canada, I would lend my "like new" SD10 for this).
That Lexus at 5:23, love it.
Great video guys, I love that you guys are looking at these unsung hero cameras that in some form have helped to shape the products and overall photography industry today. Shows the progress that the field of photography has experienced, and also funny that people still complain in regards to image quality still these day's especially considering where it all started, and how revolutionary it was and still is in interconnecting people from all over the world.
Really excited to be apart of the contest for the beautiful Fujifilm s5 pro, I've always wanted to play around with one as the colours produced from fuji's sensor is so unique, and has in a way an indescribable beauty. others can take a look at various image samples on flickr.
also on a side note the Link to the google form isn't working as also noted by other viewers.
+Gavin Balderson The link is fixed, good luck in the contest!
Awesome episode!
Is the contest still open?
Entertaining and informative - keep 'em coming!
This is so interesting well done guys.
Hello favorite camera channel, is the Panasonic GX85 coming your way?
Pleeeease make an episode about the Olympus E-1 ☺
I'm liking these videos guys, keep it up!
I started with a Canon AE1 in 1980. My first digital camera was a Canon IDs Mark ll.
I am convinced about my camera now!
Hi guys !! I am learning Photography !! Using my beloved deceased brothers Fiji S5 !! He shot my wedding in Bali 2007 and passed 2008 !! I haven't really used his gear as so complicated! I have a new Nikon ! But want to use his camera
Definitely liking the retrospective. If nothing else, it's a great reminder of how quickly we've progressed and what we take for granted now. Maybe I'll go take my Canon 350D along with my Nikon D800E next time I go out. Or my Canon S110.... No, not that one, the 2001 Digital Elph.
Curiously enough this was the first digital camera I ever got my hands on, back in 1995, as a work experience student assisting a department store catalogue shoot. Got to fire off a few frames of folded towels!!! Still, being allowed to use a $12K camera at the age of 15 was a thrill. I wouldn’t see/touch another digital camera until 1998… that was an Apple QuickTake 150, much less impressive! 😂
Do you know what was the flickering?
+Mehdi Bakkali We've been unable to duplicate it, so it's hard to tell. I suspect it was an issue with the FS5's electronic ND. I'll update if I can figure it out.
Jordan @ TCSTV
Hey guys - great video :)
I found very recently old MInolta XG7 and started shooting film a bit - really rewarding experience,I must add :)
Any chance of doing that review as well?
Also may a comprehensive video about films for us younger photographers junst to see difference from film to film to see which one we could try :)
thanks
Interesting..I wish you guys would do the Olympus E1
I understood that those cameras were F series 35mm film cameras converted to digital. Not sure though. They were around $5k at the time so I later bought an Olympus E-10 which was much better at 4.1 megapixels but it ate AA batteries. Still have it.
I remember seeing the NC2000 at the mall for Santa photos. Hoping the D2000/DCS520 is in the pipeline.
Awesome video! Very educational, but also fun :D
I still shoot film and the Nikon N90s / F90x is my favorite camera. I bought one last month for $40 in mint condition. No need to pay hundreds for an F100 or F5.
OMG those pics made me think of the ones in my middle school text books
Great video. I would love to own that camera. I like the colours.
Great review, really interesting, thanks.
Did you set a building on fire so you could show the strange hue of the picture?
Great! Brings back some memories! :-)
I used to have Kodak dcs 520, loved it ;] my first dslr
that's like holding a VCR to take pictures. I want one!
@Jordan , What was all that flickering about, from a technical point of view. It shows up again at 4:07.
Nice video though! :) Keep the good work, guys!
+Felipe Sandoval We haven't been able to duplicate the issue, so we don't know for sure what caused it. I suspect it might have something to do with the electronic ND filter on the Sony FS5.
Jordan @ TCSTV
Strrrrrrrrrrrrrrangely entertaining :)
Amazing video!
f0 x af was very good and if your a single shot focus and recompose shooter it is still absolutely fine
more episodes like this. Go into classic film cameras
it would be interesting to see a comparison between this and canons first digital slr, just to see how things progressed in that short time span (like the d2000 or 1d)
More look forward to the review of Kodak DCS pro SLR/n
Do a Minolta RD-175 please