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The Fuji S2 and the Nikon D100 hands-on in studio

I’ve been using two of the most popular digital SLRs in the studio for several months: the Fuji FinePix S2 Pro and the Nikon D100. I’ll not belabor you with arcane technical info. This can be found, in excruciating detail, at dozens of websites. I’m interested in their usability as studio cameras and the quality of images they produce. Suffice it to say that both are six megapixel digital SLRs based on the Nikon N80 film body, and both use Nikon autofocus lenses. Both have built-in flashes that are superfluous for studio use, and both can produce excellent images.

Here is my “walk-through” on the practicalities of these cameras in everyday use.

Nikon D100


click image for larger view
Fuji S2


click image for larger view

The setup:

Both cameras have a conventional hot shoe for a studio flash trigger, so I can use my Wein infra-red Pro-Sync 1 on either camera. (Oddly, the Nikon lacks a conventional sync-cord connector: so an adapter is needed if your setup cannot use the hot shoe.). Both cameras have a slow shutter sync speed (1/125th on the Fuji, 1/180th on the Nikon) - a heritage of the N80 body. ISO ranges from 100-1600 on the Fuji, and 200-6400 on the Nikon. I prefer having the 100 ISO for shallow depth-of-field shots, but its absence hasn’t been a significant handicap. Shutter and aperture settings are straightforward, and both cameras can use either a Microdrive or a Compact Flash card for storage. The Fuji can also accommodate SmartMedia cards.

The battery arrangements for the two cameras are very different. The Fuji has a curious design in which the camera is powered by four AA rechargeable batteries while its internal flash uses two non-rechargeable Li-ion CR123 batteries. For studio work, the CR123s are unnecessary and I haven’t bothered installing them. Using 2000 mA rechargeable AA NiMH batteries to power the camera, I can routinely do a two or three-hour shoot with the Fuji before swapping batteries.

One virtue of AA cells is that their capacity is constantly improving, giving your camera newer and better power options as time goes on. The capacity of the cells is ever-increasing, with 2200 mA per cell now common, and General Electric has a new line of cells with built-in thermal switches that allow their charger to blast special cells up to full charge in 15 minutes. Thomas Distributing carries a huge array of such cells and their website is an excellent source of battery information.

The Nikon camera comes with a single custom rechargeable Li-ion battery but also has the ability to use six AA batteries in an optional grip which screws onto the bottom of the camera. The grip is excellent, and the AA batteries do offer very long shoot times. But I find the custom Nikon battery has amazing longevity. I can shoot a three-hour session and fill a one-gigabyte card with 400 images on a single charge of the Nikon battery. So, although I have the optional grip, I seldom use AA batteries in the Nikon.


The shoot:

Neither viewfinder is wonderful. Both deliver a small image compared to the Nikon F5s and F100s I once used. With the Fuji especially, I find myself looking around the viewfinder to check the expression on the model’s face.

The optional grip is a valuable plus for the Nikon. In addition to AA battery support, it offers duplicate camera controls for shooting with the camera held vertically. It also offers a voice recording function which I am sure precisely seven people in the Western Hemisphere must use. Both cameras “feel” right and handle well.

Neither of these cameras is a speed champ in saving images, and like most photographers, I hate to wait for the camera to save shots when I am in the midst of shooting. But as long as I use a super-fast card, storage speed is not a problem with either camera. I’m currently using one-gigabyte Sandisk Ultra II compact flash cards - the fastest card I have found. Using an Ultra II and proceeding at my normal studio pace shooting full-size raw or jpg images, I can work continuously without delays while the camera saves images.

A side note: Neither camera is well suited for the “instant-review” of images on an external monitor, which I outlined in my first column. The D100 lacks the FireWire port of the D1x, so the uploading of images is slow, and the Fuji, while featuring a FireWire port, has rudimentary remote-control software without the compliment of features of the superb Nikon Capture software.

Reviewing a shot:

My normal working style is to shoot both hand-held and from a camera stand, and to check every tenth picture on the camera screen for composition and histogram. This is straightforward with the Nikon, but less easy with the Fuji. The Fuji has an irritating habit of displaying the saved picture for only two seconds after which I must push a button to retrieve the image from the hard drive. This slows me down. You can set the Fuji to not save the photo and only display it on the screen until you push a button, but if you don’t push that button after each shot, the image is lost. Not good. In this mode, I guarantee you will lose images.

In general, the Nikon has easier to use rear-panel controls, but neither camera’s operations present much difficulty.


The images:

I could go on forever here discussing the fine points of the six-megapixel digital image. Let me relate one story. My friend, Frank Atura, is on the photography faculty of the Ringling College of Art and Design in Sarasota. I frequently shoot with Frank and several weeks ago, I loaned him the Fuji S2 which he subjected to detailed, controlled tests, against equivalent images produced by a Nikon F3 on several brands of slide film. On reviewing side-by-side 9"x13" prints from the test, we agreed: the images were very close, with the film producing slightly better color balance and the Fuji being a hair sharper and having less “grain/noise” than the film images. This experience convinced me that, for all practical purposes, digital had arrived.

That being said, I have had one practical problem with the Fuji's images: the appearance, also reported by others, of moire patterns on fine lines in the photos. For example, photographing a blonde model against a plain background produces artificial colors in the fine strands of her hair.

And I have a problem with the Nikon’s images, specifically, their white balance. The automatic white balance function of the camera is easily fooled and the “flash” and 3200K settings are, at best, very approximate. Compounding this problem is that setting a custom white balance on the D100 - the camera holds only one custom white balance setting - is comically difficult.

My conclusions: Either camera is perfectly usable for studio glamour. Any battery and storage issues are, for my uses, essentially solved. It is a given that image resolution will be better with the next generation of these cameras. However, we could certainly use improvement in the viewfinders (especially in the Fuji) and white balance functions (especially in the Nikon.)


Copyright 2007, R. A. Glidewell
Doc Glidewell can be reached at doc@onemodelplace.com
Doc's OMP ID 15389

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