Browse Tag

Mirrorless Cameras

Nikon Z7 II vs Sony, Canon, Panasonic: High-Res Mirrorless Showdown 💥

Nikon Z7 II vs Sony, Canon, Panasonic: High-Res Mirrorless Showdown 💥

Key Facts – Nikon Z7 II vs Major Competitors Camera Sensor & Resolution Continuous Shooting Max Video Autofocus System Stabilization (IBIS) Card Slots Battery Life (CIPA) Launch Price (USD) Nikon Z7 II (2020) 45.7 MP BSI CMOS, full-frame (base ISO 64) imaging-resource.com dpreview.com Up to 10 fps (RAW burst ~77 frames) imaging-resource.com 4K up to 60p (1.08× crop) imaging-resource.com; 1080p 120p 493-point on-sensor PDAF; Human/animal Eye-Detect imaging-resource.com 5-axis in-body (≈5 stops; ISO 64 improves IQ) dpreview.com dpreview.com 1× CFexpress/XQD + 1× SD UHS-II imaging-resource.com ~440 shots (LCD) / 380 (EVF) imaging-resource.com $2,999 (body) imaging-resource.com Sony A7R V (2022) 61.0 MP BSI CMOS, full-frame (ISO
16 September 2025
Mirrorless Cameras Unveiled: 10 Key Facts and Trends Shaping Photography in 2025

Mirrorless Cameras Unveiled: 10 Key Facts and Trends Shaping Photography in 2025

Expert Insights: The Future of Mirrorless Cameras Photography experts and industry leaders overwhelmingly agree that mirrorless cameras represent the future of interchangeable-lens photography. This sentiment has been echoed in public statements from the top camera makers: In summary, the trajectory of camera development clearly points toward a mirrorless future. Mirrorless interchangeable-lens cameras have matured to the point that they meet or exceed the needs of photographers at every level, while enabling new features and creative possibilities that the old mirror-based designs could not. As we move further into the mid-2020s, we can expect MILCs to dominate new camera releases and
Mirrorless Titans Showdown: Nikon Z8 vs the Best of Canon, Sony, Panasonic & Leica (2025 Edition)

Mirrorless Titans Showdown: Nikon Z8 vs the Best of Canon, Sony, Panasonic & Leica (2025 Edition)

Introduction In 2023, Nikon’s Z8 crashed the high-end mirrorless party with flagship-grade performance at a relatively accessible price. It joins a crowded field of full-frame contenders from Canon, Sony, Panasonic, and Leica. Each of these mirrorless “titans” brings a unique blend of resolution, speed, video features, and handling quirks. This report compares the Z8 against its current rivals – like Canon’s EOS R5 series, Sony’s A7R V and Alpha 1, Panasonic’s S1R, Leica’s SL2 – and even peeks at rumored/upcoming models (Canon EOS R5 II/R1, Sony A9 III/A1 II, etc.). We’ll dig into detailed technical specs (sensors, autofocus, burst rates, video capabilities, build quality, etc.), summarize expert
Comparing the Canon EOS R8, EOS R7, and EOS R50 V (2025 Edition)

Mirrorless Showdown 2025: Canon EOS R8 vs Nikon Z5 II vs Sony A7 IV – Which Full-Frame Camera Wins?

Canon EOS R8 weighs about 461 g with battery, is the lightest of the trio, and uses a single SD card slot with no IBIS. Nikon Z5 II uses a 24.5 MP BSI sensor, 5-axis IBIS up to ~7.5 stops, and dual SD UHS-II slots, priced at $1,699 body. Sony A7 IV features a 33.0 MP Exmor R BSI sensor, 5-axis IBIS rated at 5.5 stops, and dual card slots (CFexpress Type A and SD), priced at $2,499. Canon EOS R8 offers 6K oversampled 4K up to 60 fps with no crop, 10-bit internal recording, and can overheat after about
Astrophotography Showdown: Sony A7 IV vs Canon EOS Ra vs Nikon D810A – Which Captures the Cosmos Best?

Mirrorless Showdown: Sony A7 IV vs Nikon Z8 vs Canon R6 Mark II – The Ultimate Full-Frame Face-Off

Nikon Z8 features a 45.7 MP stacked BSI CMOS sensor inherited from the Z9, with base ISO 64 and essentially no rolling shutter in electronic mode. Sony A7 IV uses a 33 MP BSI CMOS sensor (non-stacked) with base ISO 100, balancing resolution and ISO performance. Canon EOS R6 Mark II uses a 24.2 MP CMOS sensor (not BSI or stacked) delivering strong low-light performance and a versatile 24 MP workflow. All three cameras output 14-bit RAW files for maximum editing latitude. The Nikon Z8 uses 493 phase-detect AF points with 3D Tracking, the Sony A7 IV uses 759-point AF
13 August 2025
Go toTop