![]() ![]() It’s amazing to see how quickly Sigma was able to update the firmware to solve these problems.Īll of this really made me do a 180 with the camera. My cards starting working with 4K RAW, the image quality improved immensely in 1080p, stabilization issues were solved, and the camera seemed to run more smoothly overall. Thankfully, when firmware 1.01 came out, all of these issues disappeared. These were all major issues that essentially made the camera unusable in any real world setting.īut I decided to hold off until the first firmware update, as there were still a lot of things to get excited about with the FP, and based on the intended feature-set it seemed like Sigma’s priorities were in the right place. Buggy electronic image stabilization that wouldn’t activate immediatelyĪ few days into using the camera, I actually considered returning it.Poor image quality when recording to 1080p, including in RAW.Inability to record 4K RAW internally to the recommended 300 MB/s SD Cards.The shadows and mid tones would bounce up and down, as if the camera was auto-exposing. Prior to installing the update, I was running the original 1.0 firmware, which had loads of little bugs.įor starters, practically every image I captured with firmware 1.0 had a flicker issue. ![]() It’s also worth noting that my review below is based off my experience with the latest Sigma FP firmware (1.01). The stills (unsurprisingly) look gorgeous coming off this sensor, but my primary need for this camera is video, so that’s what I’ll explore here today. I have been shooting stills in addition to video with the FP, but for the purpose of this post I primarily want to focus on video functionality. The camera currently runs $1899 for the body or $2199 with the bundled 45mm lens. It has a dedicated “Cine” mode, allowing the camera, menus and display to function like a true cinema camera, making it optimal for filmmakers. In a nutshell, the FP is a pocket sized full-frame camera with the ability to shoot 4K video internally in Cinema DNG RAW. If you’re new to the FP, you can read my “first impressions” post, which covers the basics of the camera. While the camera does have its quirks, the image quality and versatility of this camera is pretty remarkable. Last month I picked up a Sigma FP and have already put it to the test on a number of shoots.
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