About Thomas Fitzgerald

Thomas is a professional fine art photographer and writer specialising in photography related instructional books as well as travel writing and street photography. 

Trying out a Nikon D800 - Part 1: Video

Trying out a Nikon D800 - Part 1: Video

I recently had the opportunity to borrow a friend’s Nikon D800. While the D800 is an older camera now at this stage, I was keen to try it out, as I love my D700 and I wanted to see how it performed. I had borrowed it before, but not for as long. The lat time I had it I had shot a very short sequence of video, and I was impressed. This time I wanted to shoot a bit more video and see how good it was, more for curiosity than anything.

I haven’t done a properly planned shoot. I just shot some footage while out and about. This isn’t an attempt at doing a scientific test. I just want to make that clear, because usually, someone will complain that I haven’t done this or that, or it’s not a proper test. I know it’s not. It’s not supposed to be. I just wanted to see what it would be like shooting wth, in an informal setting.

For shooting purposes, I had a Zacuto Z-finder on the back so I could see the screen close up and I was using the Nikon 24-120mm lens. I ended up with 3 short videos. One on the Tram on the way in, one of all the construction work around the place, and the other of a Swan cleaning itself in the local park.

Generally, the video quality on the D800 is very good. Sure, it’s not 4K but it’s still of a pretty high quality. The image is clean and generally aliasing free, although you can see a bit on fine patterns like brickwork. The one thing I did notice is that there is no headroom in the video. On other systems, there will be a little bit of detail above white and below black that you can recover in post, but on this, it’s a flat cut off at 100%. This is probably more to do with the codec than the actual camera. 

Speaking of which, the only real issue I had is the low bit rate. It was fine for most things, but on a sequence, with a lot of movement in the water (The Swan sequence) the video started to show a degree of compression artefacts, which is to be expected. I could have recorded the uncompressed output to get around this issue, but I didn’t have access to an external recorder. Having said that, the codec does do pretty well considering the low bit rate. 

Overall though, I liked the video quality. There is something to be said for the full frame look. It’s smooth and the bokeh is lovely. There’s just a quality to it, that I can’t quite describe. I was using a good lens too so that helped. I have shot lots of stills with the camera too, and I’ll cover them in another post soon.


Help Support the Blog

If you like this post then you can see more of my work on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. I also have a YouTube channel that you might like. You should also check out my other Photography Project: The Streets of Dublin. If you want to get regular updates, and notices of occasional special offers, and discounts from my store, then please sign up for the Newsletter.

All of the work I do here, and the information on this blog is done entirely free of charge and takes quite a bit of work. I want to spend more and more time on this blog, and offer more and more of this kind of information, tips and so on. All of this is funded exclusively through my Digital Download store, so If you like what I'm doing here and want to show support, then you can do so by buying something from my Digital Download Store where I have Lightroom Presets, and e-books available for download.

If you're a Fuji X-Trans shooter and Lightroom user, check out my guide to post processing X-Trans files in Lightroom. I also have a guides for processing X-Trans files in Capture One and Iridient Developer.

For Sony Alpha shooters I have a new guide with tips on how to get the best from processing your A6000 Images in Lightroom.

Video: Recreating a Panorama in Lightroom and Photoshop

Video: Recreating a Panorama in Lightroom and Photoshop

On1 Raw Updated to 2017.5

On1 Raw Updated to 2017.5