The End of an Era
The time has finally come to move on from my trusty Sony a7R3. It’s been an awesome body and while I’ve flirted with some others over the past few years none of them felt like a useful upgrade, so I always ended up back on the Mark 3. Amongst other things it’s been with me from New York to San Francisco and loads in-between in the US, all over Asia, through Africa including being AWOL in Madagascar for a few days, went from the Portuguese coast to Russia via 9 other cities and more countries. It even survived Burning Man more than once. My companion on a bunch of hikes, including the Camino de Santiago and all-around New Zealand it’s been a phenomenal device.
Its replacement? The a7CR. I’ve been playing with it for a couple of months now and knowing that the Mk.3 with its forever lost eye cup and extremely well worn body was reaching the end during my Scottish adventure last summer, I was looking for something more compact for the next few years which are shaping up to involve a lot of time on the road. This is a great balance of great specs and compact size. The question is… stick with my 24-105 G or go for something a little more compact (and a bit less worn!)?

That New IG Crop
If you missed it yesterday, here’s how to do that (probably buggy) IG post type that gets quite a bit of interest…
1) Go to https://business.facebook.com/latest/composer on your laptop/desktop) – untick FB in the interface if it is connected, leaving IG on.
2) Do the text.
3) Upload the image (in this case the image is 2.1k x 7.4k) and as it’s uploading immediately hover over the publish button.
4) Publish becomes clickable for about 0.25 seconds before the error kicks in about crop.
5) Whack the publish button during that 0.25 seconds!
Sony’s a7R III
Daily Photo – Sony’s a7R III
I guess this is the camera body that should be described as “my” camera. Up until this point in my photography I’d jumped from body to body and brand to brand but despite moving to other models along the way such as the mark 4 and the Hasselblad X1D I’ve always returned to the a7R III. It has its battle scars for sure, but it has never let me down, across many continents and trips in the most extreme conditions and it’s still going strong today.












