![]() The Sony and Nikon are both full-frame cameras, so we shot this side by side. We are first going to shoot in 4k resolution to see how they perform. ![]() The Canon has finally started to fall apart, but it’s not colorful. If you take a look at the Sony and Nikon, it is turning all sorts of colors. The Nikon does have some consistency in the photos, but the Canon is just performing better overall. The Nikon is now the grittiest, but color-wise it seems the most neutral just a tad green. Nikon is looking gritty, whereas the Canon is still holding. The noise is looking colorful on the Sony. In all of the photos, she’s still looking and none of the highlights are overexposed. We see some noise when we look at all of them, but the Nikon definitely has the most noise. Let’s talk a look at the grey card in each of the photos. The Canon was amazing, there were 33 photos and there was only one that wasn’t in focus. It’s getting about 90% of those shots really sharp. We tested the autofocus by having Ellen walk straight toward us as we shot.Īs we take a look at the Sony shots, we can tell that it’s doing a good job focusing on Ellen as she walks toward us. However, since the autofocus on the Nikon wasn’t working we couldn’t do this test at all. Now the Canon and Sony both did very well in this test. Between the Nikon and the Sony, it’s more of a color preference. We couldn’t get the Nikon autofocus to work, so we had to eyeball it (hence it might not be the best). In order to compare the resolution we blew it up to 100%, and we can see the resolution here. The Nikon tends to have a sharper contrast, with an almost commercial feel. The Nikon is the brightest as we mentioned earlier, and the Canon seems to fit just right. Right off the bat, the Sony is darker it’s not as sensitive as the others. ![]() These photos are straight out of the camera, we didn’t do any color adjustments or editing. They’re all different lenses because we are sticking with the native lenses of each camera. We are going to shoot a headshot of Ellen here, and also the pub graffiti sign. This helps you to see the tonality, resolution, skin tones, color response. Image Quality TestĪ great basic test you can do with your camera is to shoot a well-lit portrait. Nikon was good with underexposure but definitely wasn’t able to hold anything in overexposure. Overall, Sony did well with the overexposure, but not with the underexposure.Ĭanon was neck and neck with Sony in overexposure and also performed the best in underexposure. The Nikon is just really bad on her face though. Nobody is holding down the building on the left anymore. If we look at her nose, you can tell you lose a lot of information on the highlight there. The Canon and the Sony look okay here if we zoom in on her face, but the Nikon has discoloration problems. Clearly, the Sony is doing the strongest with the overexposure. The Canon isn’t doing too well and the Nikon has the whole left wall almost white. OverexposedĮven with one stop up, you can already see the highlights are blowing out. The Canon looks the best out of the three, but there is some strange streaking going on as we look at the floor. With Minus 5 stops, the photos don’t look great. I would say that Sony loses this round just because you are getting some discoloration next to the eye. Minus 4 stops is a lot of expectations from a camera, but the Canon still is doing the best in the comparison. Once we blow it up to 100%, you can see some noise around the eyes as you look, but the Canon is handling super well. They still look good from a distance, but once you blow them up that’s where you can start to see the differences. There’s no trouble holding the highlights in any of the cameras. When we go one stop under at EV -1, all the shots still look good. Right off the bat, we can say that the Nikon is very sensitive to light and you can already see that at EV 0 the clouds behind her are completely blown out. ![]() Here are our first three images at normal EV 0 with the proper exposure set for her face. By 4 stops over the cameras tend to fall apart, so we really don’t need to go any higher than that. We are doing a dynamic range test, so we are going 4 stops over and 5 stops under. It’s a great place to get cameras and equipment that you want to test out or use for a special shoot. Special shout out to Borrow Lenses for letting us rent out all this equipment. In the middle, we have the Canon EOS-R and the Nikon Z-7 to round out the match. Check her out at first camera in our lineup is the Sony A7R3, which isn’t a new camera, but it’s a great competitor for these new ones. Helping us test out these new cameras is Ellen Ho, our model for today. We are pitting against each other three different mirrorless cameras from three rival camera companies.
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