I have to admit it, I've been lusting after another... I have done so from afar for a while, and then we met and there was magic. In no time flat my hands were everywhere: probing, pressing here, caressing there... I was totally smitten and have now taken leave of a long term relationship to be with this other.
You see, for almost 18 years I have been a Canon user - I did so because of the glass and have been happy in that relationship. Then I read about the Nikon Df and I was at first intrigued, then lustful. Recently I looked at our local on-line version of eBay and there was this beautiful, pristine body, with all the extras, offering to be mine for a very small investment. I agonized over breaking my monogamous relationship with Canon, but in the end I succumbed and cheated...
For those that don't know the model the Df stands for Digital Fusion: basically reverting back to the look and feel of a classic film SLR camera - with all the associated dials - but with an high-end digital camera inside. Nikon took their awesome D4 -sensor, and with a tweaked processor produced a camera with fantastic low-light/high ISO capability. It has a battery rated at 1,400 shots and you can get a battery grip to double that capacity.
This was not without controversy: it is definitely for a specific market and depending on their understanding of the purpose of the model people seemed to love it or hate it. But aimed as it was at those who have been using film with the classic SLRs like the F1, F3, FM1 etc, this is a unit that captures that style and feeling - it makes the process of taking a photo more of an occasion.
Some were upset that there is no video capability: this is unashamedly strictly a still photographers' camera, as they were in the film days. It doesn't have a built-in flash - well, neither did the classic SLRs it emulates. There is only one card slot: you could only load one film at a time into a SLR camera. It doesn't have the latest multi point focusing capability, but it is far ahead of what a film camera could do.
This is a camera that cries out to be used in manual, although it is perfectly capable of working in Aperture, Shutter or Automatic modes. It has all the features of a high-end DSLR, but they are coyly secreted in the subtle buttons and menus in the back. One great feature is that it works pretty much with ANY Nikon lens - for those pre-Ai, it has a lever that can come out to engage with the aperture control mechanism.
So what they have produced is a very solid, lightweight, efficient, multi-personality camera that is capable of taking awesome shots.
I got rid of my Nikkor lenses when I sold my Nikon SLR gear, so I have, for the time being, bought the 28-300 lens as an all-in-one solution, but I admit this cries out for fast primes. Maybe one day perhaps, but lets see how the relationship develops...