| February 27, 2014 Breaking news from America's top photo magazines | | | | Classic looks married to cutting-edge performance Up until now, the retro camera trend has been limited to smaller cameras. With the new Df, Nikon brings classic styling to a DSLR. The two-toned, black-and-silver (or all-black) body is fairly bristling with physical dials, evoking yesteryear with aplomb, yet the imaging engine is the same as that found in Nikon’s full-frame flagship D4. But unlike the D4, Df won’t capture video. How’s that for retro? |
| | Fresh off the Olympics, Nikon releases its latest flagship DSLR | | Our deadline has been extended, enter now! | | Professional photographer Layne Kennedy teaches you how to properly pack your equipment | Be the first to hear about new stuff on PopPhoto.com by subscribing to our revamped RSS feed! | | | CAMERA FACTS The 30 Most Important Digital Cameras 1997 Sound Vision SVmini (a.k.a. Vivitar ViviCam 3000 & Umax MDX-8000) A lesser-known innovator in digital imaging history, Sound Vision was founded by former Leaf employees in 1995 and created the first CMOS-based consumer camera, the SVmini. The company also made an early CMOS-based studio camera in 1998, the CMOS-PRO. Curiously, because CMOS sensors first appeared mostly in low-priced cameras, they were initially seen as inferior to CCDs. Now CMOS has almost entirely supplanted CCD. See the rest of the 30 Most Important Digital Cameras of All Time HERE. | |
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