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Recently it seems like smartphones take been having all the fun when it comes to computational imaging tricks. Portrait mode, bokeh, and synthetic telephoto are all the rage. Only high-cease camera maker Hasselblad doesn't want to be left out. Its new H6D-400C MS is a multi-shot version of the H6D that couples the company's 100MP sensor with a camera trunk that can slightly shift the sensor and lens mount, enabling avant-garde multi-capture modes that improve colour and increase resolution. A six-shot mode provides both a cleaner image and resolution up to 400MP, while a four-shot mode provides a higher-quality 100MP prototype.

Hasselblad's Answer to Phase One's Trichromatic?

By moving the sensor a single pixel in each direction betwixt the starting time iv shots, the new camera tin directly capture Cherry, Green, and Blue at every location, instead of interpolating 2 of the three colors at each pixel, similar yous get from a unmarried capture with a typical Bayer array sensor. That should provide cleaner colors if the alignment and software combined are accurate enough to pull it off. The procedure evidently requires a very stable shooting platform, and doesn't let for whatsoever discipline movement or any other motion of the camera.

Competitor Phase One has taken a different approach to getting cleaner colour, past producing a re-designed set of colour filters for its IQ3 100MP Trichromatic. By providing more separation between colors, Phase I claims it has greatly improved the concluding image. Phase One'south approach has the advantage of not requiring multiple exposures, but until the H6D-400 is available for side by side comparisons, we won't know which system is more effective for studio shooting.

Hasselblad's multi-shot camera uses offset images to improve both color and resolution

Hasselblad's multi-shot camera uses get-go images to improve both color and resolution

Super-Resolution Using Pixel Shifting

Pixel shifting to achieve more than resolution isn't new. In fact, a number of 4K projectors on the market are actually 1080p projectors that projection four frames each shifted one/2 pixel. But the H6D-400 takes it to something of an extreme on the capture side. In add-on to the 4 images information technology takes to create better color with lower noise, it takes two more than first by i/2 pixel in each direction, from which it generates an prototype with double the horizontal and vertical resolution, for a full output image of 400MP. Since information technology is a 16-chip TIFF, that means a two.4GB file for each output image — with a resolution of 23,200 x 17,400 pixels. The tiny offset required to make this happen will certainly exam the accurateness of the piezo motor system that the photographic camera uses to shift the sensor and lens mount.

Comparison of multi-shot versus single shot images taken with the H6D-400C MS

Comparison of multi-shot versus single shot images taken with the H6D-400C MS

Other Specs, Pricing, and Availability

Similar the H6D, the multi-shot version promises 15 stops of dynamic range. If you merely want cleaner color, the camera also supports a four-shot multi-shot manner that outputs 100MP, equally well equally HD and UHD video. Information technology has a USB-C connection for tethering and 30fps live view, along with Wi-Fi adequacy. The rear display is a 3-inch touch panel.

For anyone looking for a footstep up in their studio shooting and has the budget, the H6D-400c MS is expected to ship in March with an MSRP of $47,995 (adept thing information technology's non $48,000). While Hasselblad is taking pre-orders at present, for many the more than practical culling might be the rental pricing of $250-$500 per day, depending on length of the rental.