"In capturing the color, intensity and direction of every light ray flowing into the camera, Lytro Illum provides a massive amount of visual information that allows photographers to recreate sights and scenes on a truly experiential canvas," the company says. The camera gives "serious" photographers a new way to express their creativity, in an interactive manner that goes beyond 2D.
Weighing 2 pounds, the Illum has a more familiar camera shape, due to the custom, large fixed 8x optical zoom lens (30mm-250mm equivalent, with a constant f/2.0 aperture throughout the entire focal range), but the sleek, wedge-shaped body suggests it's anything but traditional (it has a design that's reminiscent of Blackmagic's 4K camera). It uses a proprietary 40-megaray light-field sensor that allows for "extreme close-focus macro." Shutter speed is up to a high 1/4000th of a second (letting users capture action scenes), and there are a few physical buttons and an articulating 4-inch touchscreen with a smartphone-like interface. There's also a hot-shoe, shutter-release port, tripod mount, and SD card slot.
Lytro describes the Illum as a camera that "creates 'living pictures' by bringing the power of 3D computer graphics to photography and enabling new avenues for visual storytelling." It's kinda mumbo jumbo, but it's obvious that the Illum blends the best aspects of a high-end camera, smartphone ease-of-use, and Lytro's unique hardware and software technologies, to create something different.
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As for the software, users can readjust a photo's aperture focus, perspective, and tilt control in post-processing – that Lytro "trick" of letting you change the focus after it's been shot, and much more. While Lytro's refocusing ability has always been the star feature in the original camera – one that we loved using, and picked as our 2012 Camera of the Year – image quality has been so-so. While it's early to say, it's clear the Illum aims to deliver greater image quality (Lytro even says it could one day rival current digital and film photography). Lytro's light-field technology has the ability to shoot in 3D, and it's able to output 3D photos to compatible devices. Lytro photo workflows are also compatible with Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom, and Apple Aperture photo-editing software. Other features include integration with popular social media networks, interactive depth-of-field assist (a Lytro button that shows the relative focus of all objects, shown on the display, letting you compose in 3D; it also shows what objects can be refocused later), and drag-and-drop cinematic animations that can be added, in-camera, to photos (pan, zoom, focus, and perspective shift).
Some things that aren't mentioned include Wi-Fi or video capture. With social media integration via the likes of Facebook and Twitter, and that the original Lytro Camera has Wi-Fi, we assume that the Illum also has it built-in. For now, it looks like the Illum is purely a tool for photography, but Lytro has the ability to turn on new features via firmware updates (as it did with the Lytro Camera), so it's possible that, down the road, more could be added.
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Lytro will ship the Illum in July, and will cost $1,599. That's high-end DSLR territory, close to entry-level full-frame. But it shows what Lytro is thinking, that this is a high-caliber camera. There's no way for consumers to try one out yet (no retail partners have been announced, but don't be surprised if it shows up at Apple Stores, where the Lytro Camera is sold), but early adopters can pre-order one at $1,499, with a $250 deposit; pre-order customers will get a limited edition camera engraving and strap, premium customer support plus two-year warranty, an extra 20-percent discount if you own an original Lytro Camera, and chance to win something called "The Ultimate Lytro Photo Experience," an exclusive photo-shoot with a prominent photographer.
We've been looking forward to seeing what Lytro will come out with next, but we've also had our doubts, wondering if the company was a one-trick pony. (Also, many new smartphones are incorporating the refocusing technique into their cameras, through software manipulation, which somewhat steals the thunder from Lytro.) CEO Jason Rosenthal said last year that Lytro will ship products akin to a Tesla S automobile. Like a Tesla, the Illum looks and sounds impressive (and pricey, to boot), but could it really change photography or is it another pricey gimmick? We're hoping for the former, and from the trailer we've seen so far, there's lots of potential. Rosenthal also said there'd be more than one product, so the Illum may just be the beginning.
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