![]() Harsh lighting or perfect golden hour? Yaaassss. Super overcast/rainy wedding day? No problem. If you already own the Mark IV, tell me your thoughts on it! If you’re buying from a private seller, just be sure to ask a lot of questions and ask for the shutter count and photos of the body. Don’t be afraid to buy refurbished! They’re just as good as brand new, sometimes even better because any issues have been fixed by Canon themselves. You can even find lightly used ones online just as I did. If you have it in the budget, I’d definitely recommend this camera. It worked out anyways since Canon discontinued the 5D Mark III not too long ago. Just be aware! When shopping for this camera, I definitely recommend adding on a couple extra batteries and large FAST memory cards (both SD and CF since it’s a dual card slot).Īll in all, I ended up falling in love with it. Luckily, I have a ton of space on my desktop and several external hard drives so I don’t run out of space when importing. Even shooting on Small RAW, I can fill up at least 48gb per wedding. RAW files are already massive, but the Mark IV file sizes are just insanely enormous. My next complaint is the size of the files. It doesn’t even realize that it’s in the slot. I have a couple third party batteries that didn’t seem to have an issue with my Mark III, but one of them (even when full) won’t work with the Mark IV at all. On average, I would go through one, maybe one and a half, fully charged Canon LP-E6 batteries during an 8 hour wedding day. I had started about 10 minutes prior… and it had just been charged. At my last wedding, the battery was a quarter drained before shooting the prep was even finished. Man, that sucker can drain a fully charged battery in no time flat. There are a couple things that I’m not a fan of firstly: the battery life. I can shoot with both bodies during a wedding day and editing is still a breeze. I’ve heard feedback about the Mark IV having “muddy” colors compared to the Mark III, but I don’t feel that it does at all. I can shoot at ISO 10,000 and not worry about an image being unusable due to noise. The low light capabilities are amazing as well. The touch screen LCD was never something I thought I would need, but now I can’t shoot without it. My Mark III was my baby, and I was essentially retiring it. Maybe it’s just my weird anxiety, but I hate change. I ended up just biting the bullet and purchasing a mint condition Mark IV a few months ago. You can fix that by disabling the “peripheral illumination” in the settings. I figured it wouldn’t transfer over in Lightroom upon upload, but I was wrong. My first issue (though fixable) was the vignetting in camera when using a Sigma lens. I ended up renting it a couple times through and each time was left not loving it. When it was announced, I must admit that I was a little disappointed. I was noticing it pretty bad at 6,400.Ĭanon released the Mark IV near the end of 2016. The second reason was because the older the camera gets, the more you’ll notice noise in your images, even when the ISO isn’t maxed out. Some photogs have their shutters last well over 200,000 clicks. I think mine was sitting at 163,000… so ok, it was a little over it’s allotted clicks. ![]() The Mark III is rated for 150,000 actuations. Camera shutters actually have a lifespan, and mine was nearing the end. When you shoot 20+ weddings a year and triple that number of portrait sessions, that shutter count just grows higher. They’re beasts! So why upgrade yet again? The first reason is how heavily used my Mark III was getting. To this day, Marc still shoots on the Mark III and my backup body is a Mark III. Enter the Canon 5D Mark III… the holy grail for wedding photographers. I needed a body that could perform in low light even better. Yes, flash is an option, but natural light is my jam. If you shoot weddings (or even attend weddings), you know that receptions (and even ceremonies) can be DARK. About 2 years after that upgrade and deciding to jump in with both feet into the Wedding World, I knew that the 7D wasn’t enough anymore either. ![]() The quality was night and day difference. I remember being so freaking impressed with it. Holy crap, my images are SO GRAINY! The max ISO is 3,200?! So I upgraded to another crop sensor, the Canon 7D. When I finally learned how to properly use my camera to its full potential in Manual mode, it really started dawning on me. Back then I didn’t know the difference between a crop sensor and a full frame body, nor was I concerned with the whopping 8.2 megapixels. The more I shot, the more limited I realized I was. I thought I was the coolest thing since toast and was set for life. Back in 2008 (or maybe 2009…? I can’t remember! It’s been over a decade) I was shooting on a Canon EOS 30D with a Canon 28-135 f/3.5-5.6 kit lens. It’s funny to look back on when I first started my photography journey.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |