I bought Nokia 1020 as a present to my wife, because she usually takes photos with a smartphone. All I can say about photo quality is just "wow". Now point and shoot camera era is officially over. It was practically over even earlier because number of photos taken with smartphones increased explosively, however, now it is officially over. At this particular moment Nokia 1020 produces a very pleasant photos and it is just ready anytime almost anywhere to shoot. I can not imagine what may make me to buy point and shoot camera today.
Anyway there are some observation as well:
photos:
1) indor white balance. it's awful, unreliable and unstable. The worse results are in auto white balance mode. For some reason in the same shooting conditions it is almost impossible to get identical white balance photos.
no other observations on photos.
verdict for photos: Nokia 1020 is a great compact camera capable to make calls.
video:
1) no "basic" manual control. Well in fact there is a possibility to manually adjust focus and manually choose white balance presets. That's it. No aperture control, no exposure control. It's terrible. In reality when you shoot indoors white balance sporadically changes under the same lighting conditions that is clearly seen during recording and in footage. It happens regardless of white balance mode choosen either auto or manual. Outdoors the camera shoots better video, although it would be nice to have more control on exposure and aperture.
2) codec is not the best one.
verdict for video: I would not recommend to buy Nokia 1020 for video unless there is a manual control available for aperture and exposure in addition to manual control of wb and focus.
FilmicPro does have a project on KS to make a version for Anroid and Windows phone. Neither funding is successful, however, still more people vote for Android rather than for Windows phone. Hopefully FilmicPro will produce windows phone version anyway.
If you have any questions or would like me to make some real world photos/videos please ask. I would not be able to make a sophisticated test though (no diagrams and graphs).
take care,
What app do you use to make photos and videos?
So far I tried only one of default camera apps that is Nokia Pro Cam. There is also Smart Cam and another one cam app. I did not tried them though. I was interested mainly in video mode of Nokia Pro Cam. I will try other default apps soon. As far as I know Nokia/MS are developing one combined camera app (including Pro Cam and Smart Cam). It should be released during this year. I am not sure if they are aware of WB flaw.
I tried every other stock camera app installed and the video is not good indoors. WB is not consistent. Black and white indoors shall be fine though. Photos' wb indoors is also a pain. For video we are awaiting for FilmicPro to come. Regarding photos my wife is happy very much about the results taken outdoors so I'm happy too.
The phone manufacturer will be bringing RAW image support to its flagship Lumia handsets, the 1520 and 1020. This will allow them to take 20MP or 41MP photos (respectively) with zero compression
Plus this guys also made new camera app.
I never thought they would bring RAW to a phone. Great move, although how long will it take to write a 41MP RAW image?
Must be pretty fast. I think it uses some simple compression. So it will be about 10-20Mb.
Two comparisons:
Second one is more fun, of course.
I have the 1020. Like it so far. Has the capability of producing fantastic pictures, but I will note that on auto mode, both focus and use of a smart shutter speed can be lacking at times. Shot to Shot when storing the full rez picture is also slow at least 3 seconds between each shot.
Shot to Shot when storing the full rez picture is also slow at least 3 seconds between each shot.
This is ok, as OS and app design is badly suited for cameras.
RAW samples at http://conversations.nokia.com/2013/10/29/another-nokia-first-digital-negatives-raw-dng-lumia/
Nokia Lumia 920,925 and 928 shootout
All three phones are evenly matched in terms of the level of detail captured and the efficacy of noise reduction. It seems that the 920 has made some strides in this department since we initially reviewed it. The fact that Nokia saw fit to raise its ISO ceiling to 3200 (from 800 when we last visited) reflects this. If the newer phones have a sensor-based advantage on the 920, it’s subtle indeed.
DXOMark report on 925. Strangely it scores quite higher compared to 920. As I understand software plays big role here as 920 had been tested with different, previous apps.
http://www.dxomark.com/Mobiles/Nokia-Lumia-925-overview-Lower-pixel-count-lower-IQ
Black incorporates a number of important improvements in image processing for the camera, begging further detailed investigation. Happily, we have both AT&T and generic Euro variants of the 1020 to hand, so it was easy to set up some test shots and see what Nokia has changed in terms of 'noise reduction and tone mapping' in going from Nokia Amber to Nokia Black and the way these interact with the class-leading camera hardware.
http://allaboutwindowsphone.com/features/item/18966_Exploring_the_imaging_improvem.php
The Lumia Black update became available worldwide yesterday Jan 9, 2014 for Nokia 1020 (in addition to AT&T version that was released earlier in 2013). Photos look more pleasant indoors now. I have to look into .DNG files taken as well. Video is still hardly usable indoors unless manual control of aperture/shutter in video mode is introduced by Nokia/Microsoft or third-party developpers.
Lumia 1520
The Nokia Lumia 1520 combines good image quality across the ISO range with full manual control over shutter speed and ISO in the very well designed Nokia Camera app. Throw DNG Raw recording into the mix and you've got yourself a real photographer's tool that allows for more creative control than any "full-auto" smartphone.
http://connect.dpreview.com/post/5207407467/nokia-lumia-1520-camera-review
After a lot of time playing with the phone's DNG files, it's safe to say that shooting Raw on the Lumia 1020 offers you some flexibility in post-processing, but not the same degree of flexibility you are you used to from your DSLR, mirrorless system camera, or even premium compacts, such as Sony's RX100.
http://connect.dpreview.com/post/6430831685/shooting-raw-with-the-nokia-lumia-1020
The Nokia Lumia 1020 offers the best smartphone camera in the market currently in terms of its image quality. When you shoot at the highest resolution the Lumia 1020 has available, up to 38-megapixels, you're going to find sharp images that you can print at desirable sizes, which is pretty rare for a smartphone camera. At the same time the Lumia 1020 will record a 5MP image, which is perfect for sharing via social networking.
http://www.steves-digicams.com/camera-reviews/nokia/1020/nokia-lumia-1020-review.html
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