The modern campus – National University of Singapore.

5-minutes First Impression of the Nikon Df

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Managed to finally get my hands on the Nikon Df and thought to run it through all you folks with an objective first impression.

In terms of height, the Nikon Df is indeed as short as the Nikon D7000 (or D610), leaving my little pinky dangling and unsupported when holding the camera. As for the remaining fingers holding the camera, the half-baked grip provided a rather limited leverage, confirming to me that the grip was introduced out of necessity to counter-balance the heavy camera and not designed with day-long ergonomics in mind.

With the heap of dials on the top plate of Nikon Df, another few additional impressions can be drawn while using them. All three bigger sets of dials are each equipped with both a miniature lock release button and an extremely stiff gear counter movement. Changing a dial position is excruciatingly tedious and plain counter-productive. (I have a feeling that the Nikon Df was secretly developed by an independent team) Try turning these dials with a gloved hand and move on to do the same with the even smaller Exposure Mode Dial before turning on the camera!

Are we there yet? Not quite…The sub-command dial is also so smoothly machined that it’s painfully hard to use them even without a gloved hand! Honestly, I have nothing against the honorable intent to encourage photographers to think more about getting a better composition, secure a better source of light etc. But I will have a big problem with any camera which has been solely designed to intentionally “road-blocked” each of our intuitive movement via such horrible design philosophy.

Nikon specifically emphasized the preferred use of small prime lenses with the Nikon Df, and I fully agree so. Anything heavier and you would be very close to the border of absurdity.

Note: Nikon Df does subtly claim the ability to effortlessly measure the white balance of a scene without the need of  a grey card. If so, I must say this has just became one of the few greatest redeeming features of the Nikon Df, among having an ultra-sensitive D4 sensor!

Let’s Talk About Your Weight

One of time-enduring curse that a photographer has to live with, has always been the hefty weight of the camera gears he or she has to put up with. In moving from one point of interests to another, the prospect of literally breaking your shoulder or hurting your wrist has been a pro photographers’ staple dose of unavoidable afflictions.

If you analyse this situation a tad deeper, you’d would soon realize a correlation between mirrorless camera makers’ key success factors to subvert this necessary evil and their unstoppable success in a short few years. It is now indeed possible to shed heavy, clumsy camera gears and still achieve optimal goal of capturing stellar imageries.

In fact, it will do more…much more. A lightened encumbrance will also now means a lengthened ability of us to shoot longer in the field, achieving new unique vantage points to shoot from and heightening our creativity to create better images.

Sony is pushing the envelope. Fujifilm has done it. Canon is inline to achieve that goal with her M family. Leica has been doing it since her first M series. Nikon is trying with her Nikon 1 series, though not hard enough (Betting my cat that V3 will not disappoint me). So, what’s not possible these days?