Logo
a1_74893c_2500
Real Life Review Review

Real Life Review: Sony Alpha 1 camera

Positivity
Positivity
30 March 2022 at 9:34:58 pm AEDT

The Sony Alpha 1 is the first in a new line of Sony cameras. After using this camera for a year, I'm ready to summarise my experiences with it.

a1_74893c_2500 a1_74893c_2500
a1_74893c_2500

The Sony Alpha 1 camera came into my life in March 2021, and it’s now March 2022. I have been using this extraordinary camera almost exclusively since then. I have shown you use of the camera in a variety of contexts, including studio flash. I have only shot stills, because I don’t shoot video. I thought I should summarise my thoughts about this camera after using it to take over a hundred thousand images.

How do I feel about the A1 now?

I’ve said it before: the A1 is the most fun I’ve had with a camera. One year, and one hundred and one thousand images later, I’m still having fun, but I have to qualify it. It’s enormous fun, but you have to work for it.

The A1 is not a simple camera to use, because it gives you so much control over its abilities. This is not a camera to get lazy with. Get the A1 if you enjoy the process of taking the photograph and all the way through the final image. If you pay attention, the A1 will reward you with images. Sharp, beautifully focussed, images, in rapid sequence, with the A1 adjusting the focus in between every image. Doing it all in complete silence. Of all the cameras I’ve owned, this one most feels like it is intended for people who do NOT want to “just point the camera at it and click”. To use a car metaphor: if you are wanting a car to visit the supermarket and get to work, you do not want a high-end sports car - the sports car is for someone who wants to enjoy the experience, and who will be paying attention to each detail of the driving experience; stop paying attention and you’ll wrap the sports car around a tree - it is relying on you to control it. Fortunately, the A1 isn’t that dangerous, but it has let me mess up on an epic level and on more images than ever before! There’s nothing quite as mortifying as getting home and having to look at 100 images, all mis-focused because I locked focus on a tree branch. At least I know who’s at fault - the A1 is just doing what I told it to do. Makes me determined to be more careful the next time, and watch the focus while I’m shooting.

Does everyone need an A1? No. Please don’t think that I’m telling you that you must go and get one. There are quite a few cameras out there, and many people don’t need (or want) what an A1 can do. I have tried to show you some of what an A1 can do (and carefully hidden almost all of my mistakes!), so you can get a feeling of why you might want one. An important warning: do not buy an A1 if it means you are spending every cent on the body. If you are going to use the A1 to its best, you are going to want some really good lenses, and possibly some new memory cards (which are currently rather expensive), and you may well need to buy more disk space (I did). I even ended up buying a new photo processing computer, so I could process more images in less time.

Do you need Sony GM lenses with an A1? No. I’ve posted images shot with the Voigtländer APO Lanthar 50mm f/2, for example, which is a fine lens, and not expensive, and it works very well on the A1. One of the joys of the Sony E mount is the large number of lenses which you can use, in both native E mount, and via adapters. There are A1 shooters who are using no Sony lenses at all. I am, but I like a lot of Sony lenses. You can use any lens you like, but sooner or later you’ll want to have at least one really good lens.

I’d characterise the A1 as a brilliant camera for the keen enthusiast. Someone who has used a number of cameras, and knows what they want, and really wants it! Someone who will learn about their camera, and go to the trouble to set it up “just right”. Importantly, I would never recommend that someone start with an A1 as their first camera, because it is just too complicated.

What’s better than an A1? Er, two A1s and an unlimited lens budget? OK, what is as good? If you are a Nikon shooter, the Z9 is the obvious choice - a Z9 shooter was telling me about his. and how it replaced both a D850 and a D5, and I got the feeling he is enjoying it (almost) as much as I’m enjoying the A1. If you shoot Canon, then maybe the R3, or the as-yet-unannounced camera they have hinted at. I am not really the best person to ask. In the past I have used high-end Canon (1Ds III), Nikon (D810), and Leica (M9) cameras, and the A1 is better (for me!) than any camera I have used before (it’s also better than all the Sony cameras I’ve used before, I must point out). Does that mean I will stop looking at other cameras? No, but don’t tell my A1 that!

It has been quite a year, and I have learned a lot. I am sure my photography has improved, because the camera has demanded that I improve.

Review Situations

In this review, I used the camera in a variety of situations, . Each situation is a separate article that can be clicked below.

Black kite in flight

Positivity
Positivity
22 April 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

This article shows a series of images shot in a single burst using the Sony A1 and the Sony 135mm GM. This combination is very effective when photographing birds which are not too far away.

Cheetah prowling - the A1 at work

Positivity
Positivity
5 May 2021 at 8:00:00 am AEST

This article shows a series of images shot in a single burst using the Sony A1 and the Sony 135mm GM.

Sony Alpha 1 camera - mid-high ISO impact on images of a black kite

Positivity
Positivity
19 May 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

The Sony Alpha 1 is going to be used at high ISO. This post compares some mid-high ISO values, and their impact on image quality.

Relax, the cheetah is a long way off!

Positivity
Positivity
7 July 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

Kulinda the cheetah can reach 120km/hour if she wants to.

A quick burst of activity

Positivity
Positivity
12 July 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

A quick burst of speed from a focussed predator

Did you know that lions climb trees?

Positivity
Positivity
28 July 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

When chased by a lion, don't expect climbing a tree to save you

A nankeen kestrel can hover!

Positivity
Positivity
7 August 2021 at 9:47:03 pm AEST

A nankeen kestrel can hover above prey.

A nankeen kestrel in flight

Positivity
Positivity
9 August 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

Small and fast, this is a hard bird to photograph!

A wedge-tail eagle in flight

Positivity
Positivity
11 August 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

The largest eagle in Australia is the wedge-tail eagle.

Eagle eyes - what is she looking at?

Positivity
Positivity
15 August 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

This eagle really can see things that you can't.

Eyes on target: black kite

Positivity
Positivity
17 August 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

Head horizontal, no matter what angle his body and wings are at

A black-breasted buzzard

Positivity
Positivity
19 August 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

Showing off her distinctive plumage, this black-breasted buzzard is naturally alliterative.

A barking owl - don't duck!

Positivity
Positivity
21 August 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

When a barking owl is flying overhead, don't duck!

A fraction of a second

Positivity
Positivity
23 August 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

How a raptor makes a capture

Making the mundane not

Positivity
Positivity
24 October 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Cheetah intensity

Positivity
Positivity
28 October 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Wild black kite - got any spare?

Positivity
Positivity
30 October 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Lemur against the light

Positivity
Positivity
17 November 2021 at 9:47:52 pm AEDT

A barking owl in flight - straight at me!

Positivity
Positivity
1 December 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

I'm ready for my close-up Mr de Mille.

Lazing on a Sunday afternoon...

Positivity
Positivity
5 December 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Australian kestrel in flight towards me

Positivity
Positivity
7 December 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Melbourne Zoo on Christmas Day

Positivity
Positivity
25 December 2021 at 6:01:48 pm AEDT

Christmas at Melbourne Zoo is a time to get some beautiful photographs on our friends.

A pirouette turns out beautifully

Positivity
Positivity
27 December 2021 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Melbourne Zoo on New Year's Eve

Positivity
Positivity
1 January 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

New Year's Eve at Melbourne Zoo was hot, but the otter's enclosure is well shaded.

The wild dogs of Werribee

Positivity
Positivity
3 January 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Giving the African wild dogs at Werribee Open Range Zoo some time in the sun

Studio flash - a dancer against the light

Positivity
Positivity
9 January 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Gorilla's breakfast answering "how sharp is it?"

Positivity
Positivity
16 January 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Does this photograph of a gorilla's breakfast show how sharp this lens can be?

Go, go, goanna!

Positivity
Positivity
23 January 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

A goanna may be a lizard, but a lot bigger than most lizards.

Australia's apex aerial predator still has to moult

Positivity
Positivity
13 February 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

A wedge tail eagle looks dangerous, even when she is scruffy!

Natural light - a dancer against a wall

Positivity
Positivity
15 February 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

A bit too much glass for the shot

Positivity
Positivity
19 February 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

A wedge tail eagle looks dangerous, even when she is scruffy!

A water dragon, not a lemur

Positivity
Positivity
26 February 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

This is not what you expect to find in the lemur enclosure.

What can you do with a whole bunch of images from a burst?

Positivity
Positivity
27 February 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

What can you do with a burst of images?

Melbourne Museum's Monster!

Positivity
Positivity
12 March 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

The newest exhibit at Melbourne Museum is huge, but so cool - the most complete dinosaur skeleton uncovered so far.

No boys allowed in this tree-house!

Positivity
Positivity
17 April 2022 at 8:00:40 pm AEST

A lion's tree-house is girls only for a little bit longer.

Nothing in focus?

Positivity
Positivity
19 April 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

Sometimes the details are important!

Melbourne Museum's Monster Revisited!

Positivity
Positivity
21 April 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

The newest exhibit at Melbourne Museum is huge, but so cool - the most complete dinosaur skeleton uncovered so far.

That rock is moving!

Positivity
Positivity
25 April 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

Sometimes a tortoise just has to get somewhere.

Boys only in this tree-house!

Positivity
Positivity
27 April 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

To balance a girls-only tree-house we must show a boys-only one.

The new boy in town

Positivity
Positivity
29 April 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

A new male lion stalks the back range at Werribee as he waits out quarantine.

An eland posing

Positivity
Positivity
23 May 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

An eland posing at the top of a hill

Black and white on colour

Positivity
Positivity
29 May 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

To balance a girls-only tree-house we must show a boys-only one.

What kind of music does this wallaby like?

Positivity
Positivity
12 June 2022 at 8:00:16 pm AEST

A rock wallaby at rest

Ribs for breakfast

Positivity
Positivity
20 June 2022 at 8:00:23 pm AEST

Making a meal of some ribs

Ready for my closeup

Positivity
Positivity
22 June 2022 at 8:00:31 pm AEST

Making a meal of some ribs

Warmly furred waterbuck

Positivity
Positivity
24 June 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

Making a meal of some ribs

The dark side of the rhino

Positivity
Positivity
26 June 2022 at 8:00:46 pm AEST

Making a meal of some ribs

Tree-top dining

Positivity
Positivity
28 June 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

When you are this tall, you have to look down on the world.

Hippos playing follow-the-leader

Positivity
Positivity
30 June 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

Shooting through glass with the sun at a low angle in the sky

Positivity
Positivity
2 July 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEST

How much difference does a 2x teleconverter make?

Positivity
Positivity
4 July 2022 at 8:00:39 pm AEST

To two or not to two...

Butterfly at a distance

Positivity
Positivity
16 October 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

The brightly coloured butterfly in this shot is Ornithoptera priamus (common green birdwing)

Tired Tiger?

Positivity
Positivity
31 October 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Sunbathing Simba

Positivity
Positivity
1 November 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Disheveled Kookaburra

Positivity
Positivity
2 November 2022 at 8:00:14 pm AEDT

It wasn't me!

Positivity
Positivity
3 November 2022 at 9:00:00 pm AEDT

Things are looking up!

Positivity
Positivity
5 November 2022 at 8:00:06 pm AEDT

Rarely scene

Positivity
Positivity
6 November 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Green space on the edge of the city centre

Positivity
Positivity
7 November 2022 at 8:00:00 pm AEDT

Over the rooftop

Positivity
Positivity
8 November 2022 at 8:00:06 pm AEDT
Logo
Not logged in
JSON Feed RSS Sitemap Admin
Helpful Links
About Us Privacy Contact Us
"Social Links"
Email Facebook Instagram Twitter
©2024 Visual Voyager Pty Ltd