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Gear of the Year: Richard’s Choice Nikon Z8

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Gear of the Year: Richard’s Choice Nikon Z8


Can you imagine a more ‘DPReview’ camera than the Nikon Z8?

The Nikon Z8 is, without question, my gear of the year. It’s probably the best camera I’ve ever used, and yet that’s only part of what made it stand out to me.

Until recently, you had to choose one camera to capture the very best landscape images (that you’re capable of), but quite another if you wanted to capture the action at the Olympics. The Z8 is competitive for both. And beyond this, it’s a very credible video camera. And it does all this at two-thirds the cost of Nikon’s top-end pro model, in a body that’s a fraction smaller and lighter than the D850.

It’s still a bigger, heavier and more expensive camera than I can ever imagine myself buying, but I felt lucky every time I hit the shutter button.


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In 2023, DPReview went through what you might call ‘rough air.’

At the start of the year, it was no secret that our then-parent company was planning layoffs, so the turbulence didn’t come completely out of the blue.

By March 21st we could share the bad news publicly, which made it suddenly feel very real. It was made clear to us that the decision was final. Come a certain date, we would all be out of a job. All there was left to do was to put our affairs in order and accomplish whatever we could. Return all the cameras, prepare the site to become an archive, work out how to say goodbye.

We were already well into the glide path, publishing wind-down and goodbye content when a short message came over the headset.

“Could you, er, keep going for a bit?”

“For how long?” we asked.

“Just keep going.”

We had already started publishing our ‘sunsetting’ articles when the request came through for us to keep going.

Nikkor Z 24-70mm F4 S | ISO 200 | 1/80 sec | F9.0
Processed in Adobe Camera Raw, Landscape color profile, Blacks darkened, highlights recovered, cropped to 16:9.
Photo: Richard Butler

And so we found ourselves pulling up on the stick, trying to settle into a plausible-looking holding pattern, and trying not to glance too often at the fuel gauge. We brainstormed new content ideas, returned to those articles we’d never quite got ’round to finishing, and waited for further updates.

This uncertainty meant having to make some distinctly noncommittal phone calls to our industry contacts: “I know we’ve said we are closing, but would it be possible for you to factor us in for any launches you might be planning?”

And one of the launches was the Nikon Z8, the first to fall after our supposedly non-negotiable end date. And can you imagine a more ‘DPReview’ camera than the Z8? The prospect that we wouldn’t get to cover it had been heartbreaking.

Nikon was trying to keep the camera under wraps, so walking up to strangers and asking if I could take their photo to try out this new… er… lens, was the opposite of what they wanted me to do.

Nikkor Z 24-70mm F2.8 S @ 67mm | ISO 360 | 1/80 sec | F10
Taken with a pre-production Nikon Z8
Photo: Richard Butler

By the time of my call, Nikon had already made all its plans for demonstrating the camera without us. A little arm-twisting and calendar shuffling later and I’d arranged to fly to New York en route to the UK, where I’d been planning to lick my post-redundancy wounds.

Nikon US was doing all it could to keep the camera under wraps, so my last-minute need to film and take photos along The Highline in the midst of Manhattan must have been nerve-racking for its staff. But they were kind enough to accommodate us, if it helped reinforce the message that we wouldn’t be closing, after all.

Being able to report on the camera changed my UK trip completely.

Back at the races! Nikon UK lent me a camera and I was able to borrow a Z 100-400mm from Amateur Photographer’s Andy Westlake to get some photos at the Crystal Palace Crit series in London.

Nikkor Z 100-400mm F4.5-5.6 VR S @ 400mm | ISO 12,800 | 1/2000 sec | F5.6
Photo: Richard Butler

Train journeys across Scotland became opportunities to edit YouTube videos. Hotel Wi-Fi was pushed to extremes, uploading the footage and all those 46MP Raws ready for the embargo.

Nikon US also convinced Nikon UK to lend me one of its precious loaner cameras immediately after the embargo lifted. With access to the camera, the time I’d expected to spend with family, contemplating my future suddenly got repurposed. Instead I was looking for ways to scratch the surface of a camera that can shoot landscapes and action with equal aplomb. I was suddenly looking for sporting events and trying to borrow appropriate lenses from erstwhile colleagues.

And I loved every minute of it. There’s something wonderfully confidence-inspiring about using a camera that you know is going to comfortably do whatever you ask of it. Even if you haven’t worked out what that is yet.

My trip to the UK suddenly involved a lot more photography than I’d expected, but I appreciated every minute of it.

Nikkor Z 24-70mm F2.8 S @ 24mm | ISO 64 | 1/320 sec | F8.0
Processed from Raw using ACR, white balance warmed, vignetting corrected, blue tones adjusted
Photo: Richard Butler

But more than that, the experience of going out and shooting with a camera, and trying to find the clearest way to describe what it offers is what I love doing. And I appreciated it all the more for having spent several months believing I wouldn’t get to do it anymore. I was excited to show we were still here, and that we weren’t about to disappear.

That’s what I meant when I said I felt lucky, every time I pressed the shutter button. And that’s the story that plays in my head, every time I look back at the Z8 gallery: every photo contains a reminder of a distinctly bumpy period that’s thankfully now behind us.

Now we’ve got through that period of turbulence, we look to have some clear skies ahead of us, so we’re going to turn off the seatbelt sign and we invite you to settle back, relax and enjoy the journey. We’re delighted to say that our regular on-screen entertainment will continue to be available.


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Review sample gallery

Pre-production sample gallery from New York

All images shot using a pre-production Nikon Z8



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Pentax K-1 and K-1 II firmware updates include astrophotography features (depending on where you live)

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Pentax K-1 and K-1 II firmware updates include astrophotography features (depending on where you live)


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Yesterday, Ricoh quietly released firmware 2.50 for its Pentax K-1 and K-1 II DSLRs. However, the features you can expect to gain from this update may depend on your geography.

Ricoh’s English-language firmware pages for the K-1 and K-1 II state that firmware 2.50 delivers “Improved stability for general performance.”

However, astute Pentax users noted that Ricoh’s Japanese-language firmware pages (translation) indicate that the update also includes a limited feature called “Astronomical Photo Assist,” a collection of three new features designed for astrophotography: Star AF, remote control focus fine adjustment, and astronomical image processing.

Star AF is intended to automate focusing on stars when using autofocus lenses. Rather than manually focusing on a bright star and changing your composition, it promises to let you compose your shot and let the camera focus.

Remote control fine adjustment allows users to adjust focus without touching the lens and requires Pentax’s optional O-RC1 remote. Astronomical image processing will enable users to make in-camera adjustments to astrophotography images, including shading correction, fogging correction, background darkness, star brightness, celestial clarity, and fringe correction.

Astronomical image processing on the K-1 and K-1 II will enable users to make in-camera adjustments to astrophotography images, including shading correction, fogging correction, background darkness, star brightness, celestial clarity, and fringe correction.

According to Ricoh, Astronomical Photo Assist is a premium feature that must be purchased and costs ¥11,000 for an activation key (about $70 at current exchange rates).

Although these astrophotography features appear to be Japan-only for now, a Ricoh representative tells us, “Ricoh Imaging Americas confirmed that the premium firmware features for the PENTAX K-1 and PENTAX K-1 Mark II will eventually be available to US customers.”

Firmware update 2.50 for both the K-1 and K-1 II is available for download from Ricoh’s website.



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On this day 2017: Nikon launches D850

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On this day 2017: Nikon launches D850


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As part of our twenty fifth anniversary, we’re looking back at some of the most significant cameras launched and reviewed during that period. Today’s pick was launched seven years ago today* and yet we’re only quite recently stepping out of its shadow.

The Nikon D850 is likely to be remembered as the high watermark of DSLR technology. We may yet still see impressive developments from Ricoh in the future (we’d love to see a significantly upgraded Pentax K-1 III), but the D850 was perhaps the green flash as the sun set on the DSLR as the dominant technology in the market.

Click here to read our Nikon D850 review

Why do we think it was such a big deal? Because it got just about everything right. Its 45MP sensor brought dual conversion gain to high pixel count sensors, meaning excellent dynamic range at base ISO and lower noise at high ISOs. Its autofocus system was one of the best we’ve ever seen on a DSLR: easy to use and highly dependable, with a good level of coverage. And then there was a body and user interface honed by years of iterative refinement, that made it easy to get the most out of the camera.

None of this is meant as a slight towards the other late-period DSLRs but the likes of Canon’s EOS 5DS and 5DSR didn’t present quite such a complete package of AF tracking, daylight DR and low-light quality as the Nikon did. With its ability to shoot at up to 9fps (if you used the optional battery grip), the D850 started to chip away at the idea that high megapixel cameras were specialized landscape and studio tools that would struggle with movement or less-than-perfect lighting. And that’s without even considering its 4K video capabilities.

In the seven years since the D850 was launched, mirrorless cameras have eclipsed most areas in which DSLRs once held the advantage. For example, the Z8 can shoot faster, autofocus more with more accuracy and precision, across a wider area of the frame and do so while shooting at much faster rates.

But, even though it outshines the D850 in most regards, the Z8 is still based around what we believe is a (significant) evolution of the same sensor, and its reputation still looms large enough for Nikon to explicitly market the Z8 as its “true successor.”

Nikon D850 sample gallery

Sample gallery
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*Actually seven years ago yesterday: we had to delay this article for a day to focus on the publishing the Z6III studio scene: the latest cameras taking precedence over our anniversary content.



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Nikon Z6III added to studio scene, making image quality clear

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Nikon Z6III added to studio scene, making image quality clear


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Photo: Richard Butler

We’ve just received a production Nikon Z6III and took it into our studio immediately to get a sense for how the sensor really performs.

Dynamic range tests have already been conducted, but these only give a limited insight into the image quality as a whole. As expected, our Exposure Latitude test – which mimics the effect of reducing exposure to capture a bright sunrise or sunset, then making use of the deep shadows – shows a difference if you use the very deepest shadows, just as the numerical DR tests imply.

Likewise, our ISO Invariance test shows there’s more of a benefit to be had from applying more amplification by raising the ISO setting to overcome the read noise, than there was in the Z6 II. This means there’s a bigger improvement when you move up to the higher gain step of the dual conversion gain sensor but, as with the Z6 II, little more to be gained beyond that.

These are pushing at the extreme of the sensor’s performance though. For most everyday photography, you don’t use the deepest shadows of the Raw files, so differences in read noise between sensors don’t play much of a role. In most of the tones of an image, sensor size plays a huge role, along with any (pretty rare) differences in light capturing efficiency.

Image Comparison
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As expected, the standard exposures look identical to those of the Z6 II. There are similar (or better) levels of detail at low ISO, in both JPEG and Raw. At higher ISO, the Z6III still looks essentially the same as the Z6II. Its fractionally higher level of read noise finally comes back to have an impact at very, very high ISO settings.

Overall, then, there is a read noise price to be paid for the camera’s faster sensor, in a way that slightly blunts the ultimate flexibility of the Raw files at low ISO and that results in fractionally more noise at ultra-high ISOs. But we suspect most people will more than happily pay this small price in return for a big boost in performance.



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