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Canon c300 mark 21/12/2024 He is familiar with and shows great interest in medium and large format photography with products by Phase One, Hasselblad, Alpa and Sinar and has used many cinema cameras from the likes of Sony, RED, ARRI and everything in between. He is member of Nikon NPS and has been a Nikon user since the film days using a Nikon F5 and saw the digital transition with Nikon's D series cameras and is still to this day the youngest member to be elected in to BEWA, The British Equestrian Writers' Association. He is a Fellow of The Royal Society of Arts, holds a Foundation Degree in Equitation Science and is a Master of Arts in Publishing. Originally specialising in Equestrianism, his visuals have been used by the leading names in the equestrian industry such as The Fédération Equestre Internationale (FEI), The Jockey Club, Horse & Hound and many more for various advertising campaigns, books and pre/post-event highlights. It's a big investment, but this camera has made the rest of the cinema line-up from Canon obsolete in my eyes – and that's why I think the Canon C300 Mark III priced at $10,999 just isn't worth it in today's market.įor nearly two decades Sebastian's work has been published internationally. My advice, forget the Canon C300 Mark III and the traditional Cinema EOS line-up and invest in the modern Canon EOS R5 C. Yes, this is still a heavy investment, but you also save $6,500. And the best bit? It is priced at just $4,499. In effect, the R5 C is not just the Canon C300 Mark III but also the acclaimed C700, all in one compact package – and it is still a worthy stills camera, as with the flick of a switch you effectively have a Canon EOS R5 with 45MP stills. The R5 C is at least a third the size of the Canon C300 Mark III, and obliterates it in every single specification: it is able to produce an 8K image at 60fps, records 12-bit Cinema RAW light internally, has 4K 120fps slow-motion capabilities, and the option to use a multi-function shoe to have two full-sized XLR inputs and 24-bit audio. That checklist above would also be complete if you still looked at the Cinema EOS line from Canon, but moved towards the Canon EOS R5 C. Look how the market has changed, though, and what manufacturers are producing today.
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