Great review and great photography. I love your "direct using" approach, as opposed to test charts and brick walls
I remember playing with P7000 in a shop and while I loved the size, body style and handling, the slowish lens was not that inspiring. Now, with an articulated screen and faster glass, it becomes much more appealing. Did you have a chance to shoot in similar conditions with Panasonic LX7 or Olymus XZ2? Or Canon G15? A comparison similar to one you did with Sigma and Sony would be interesting.
Thanks for bringing a lot of interesting content over here.
Thank you very much, I am glad you enjoyed my "real world" approach - charts and brick walls have a place in camera reviews, but there are already quite a few very good sites providing that kind of information, while the real world often provides different views and conclusions: for instance, charts are 2D while the real world is 3D, so a lens' with field curvature can show poorly in charts but better than another in the real world, etc.
I didn't have a chance to use the LX7, XZ2 or G15 yet; I'd love to test them, but I am doing this without any support from brands etc, so everything comes out of my pocket and this, sadly, limits what I can do
However, I started a fund-collecting mechanism on my blog: I hope to get enough subscribers or donations to be able to do much more reviews in the future! In the end, 4.99 US per month is less than most people spend for coffee in a day, and you'll not be getting any gear review with your cuppa
Thank you very much! Glad you enjoyed
Excellent review. Nice pix.
Quite a bit of water in the streets, though. Perhaps the drains are blocked.
Cheers, Jock
Hey Jock, you noticed, huh? I told these guys to fix their draining systems, they told me that works started in the 1500's and didn't end yet...
Seriously though, I am glad you enjoyed the review and the pics - thank you!
Fine photos, the P7700 would've been on my shortlist if it only had a 24mm lens.
Hello Yeats, yes - I would have loved a 24mm wide end. Maybe Nikon thought that 28-200 is a "classic" super-zoom focal?
Seriously, probably going 4mm wider would have meant a slower lens and a lower performer; anyway, maybe in the next iteration...
Thank you for sharing your lovely article and images. As a P7700 owner, I too feel it is a fantastic creative tool.
Thank you, I am glad you enjoyed it! I agree with you, the P7700 is finally a very very good "serious compact" from Nikon, after the P7000 & P7100 "beta tests"...
Wow, love the topmost one -- it just hits me in the eye! (In a good way!)
Great shots from what is obviously a very good little camera.
I am glad you enjoyed the pictures, the first one is pretty striking technically speaking to be coming from such a small sensor. I really enjoyed working with the P7700!
Wonderful images! Another member here (Pim) has also posted some great images from one of these cameras. The P7700 strikes me as having just about the best size and ergonomics of this class of camera; essentially the same as the Canon G11/12 with the flip screen but without the hump of the below average OVF on the Canon. This is the exact type of body that I would like the Sony 1" sensor (from the RX100) used in.
Thank you, I am glad you enjoyed the pics! As well, thank you for the heads up, I will go and check Pim's images out. I agree, the P7700's size and ergonomics are just about perfect; the camera is solid and finish is top notch, controls are very well positioned and aplenty for serious users, the tilting screen is really useful and they managed to keep it large (3") and of very high quality; all this while managing to keep size down to a very compact level for such a camera.
I would love a 1" sensor in it, but this would mean a larger lens if you want to keep range & speed; in turn, this would mean a larger body... in the end, every camera design is the result of compromises, and no camera is perfect: for what it is, to me the P7700 is a very successful tool!