Curiosity is rigged with
two high-tech cameras that stream images from Mars to Earth. This was the year we saw
high resolution photos—panoramas, even—of Mars’ landscape, for the first time ever. It’s the kind of stuff that brings scientists to tears.
Photokina is like the Olympics of consumer photography. It occurs only once every two years in Cologne, Germany, when hundreds of thousands convene from around the world. We happened to attend this year. This is
what we saw and
who we met.
The iPhone 5\n
No one was really sure if the iPhone 5 was coming this year, but here it is. With it, there’s been a rapid boom of gadgets that give your iPhone all the gear that your DSLR has: all kinds of lenses, including an
adapter to mount Canon & Nikon lenses to your iPhone, tripods, remotes, cable releases, video rigs, and boom mics. The Photojojo Store has a bevy of these
iPhone 5 gizmos for the curious. Apps are developing just as fast to keep up: Snapseed, VSCO Cam, Flickr’s iOS app redesign, Twitter’s new photo filters, and the Facebook Camera app release, along with the $1 billion purchase of Instagram.
Instant Cameras\n
Analog photography isn’t forgotten. On the contrary. Polaroid launched their
Z2300 instant digital camera, a camera that prints sticky-back instant photos that can be saved digitally. The Impossible Project, the company that salvaged Polaroid’s old factories, released 8x10 integral film, something no one thought would be possible. Meanwhile,
Fuji’s Instax Mini and
210 has been growing increasingly popular.
Ikea’s Cardboard Camera \n
Digital Cameras That Look Like Analog Rangefinders\n
Cameras like Fuji’s
X100 mirorrless camera and their newer
XF1, a point-and-shoot that looks like a vintage 35mm, and have been popular as alternatives to DSLRs. For something even smaller, check out the
Classic Mini Digital Camera.
Cameras That Run on Android\n
Two cameras that run on Android came out this year,
Samsung’s Galaxy Camera and
Nikon’s Coolpix S800C. We got to play with them at Photokina this year. While they’re a good idea in concept (more focus on the camera with the editing and uploading capabilities of your phone), I’d like to see where this is going from here.