Hasselblad 907X 50C Review: Part 3/3 – the discussion on image quality with sample photos

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This is our concluding episode of the three part series on the Hasselblad 907X 50C. In this article, we present some sample images, and discuss image quality and draw our conclusions on the camera system.

The earlier two episodes on our fortnight with the new(ish) camera system from Hasselblad is found here:

Chillout TGIFridays: Part 3/3 of the review on the Hasselblad 907X 50C – Image Quality

As discussed, the Singapore distributors – Cles Distribution extended a loan of the Hasselblad 907X 50C with the XH Adapter and Control Grip to us for a fortnight. We used this as our main, daily use camera for the entire duration. For lenses, we used it almost exclusively with the Hasselblad H Series lenses that I own personally – the HCD 4/28mm, the HC 2.8/80mm and the HC 4/120mm Macro. We also had the opportunity to use the digital back – the CFV II 50C with a vintage Hasselblad 503CW owned by my friend Jimmy Sng. The lens attached to the 503CW is the Carl Zeiss Planar 80mm. And this evaluation is entirely based on this set of equipment.

Watches

I shot all the watch images appearing for review on these pages during those two weeks with the Hasselblad 907X 50C, with the HC 4/120 Macro and HC 2.8/80 with H26 Extension Tube. I use the 80mm in place of the 120mm for the selfie wrist shots, as the working distance of the 80mm is shorter than the 120mm, and enabled me to hand hold the camera on the right hand, and shoot the watch on my left wrist. The longer working distance of the 120mm would require my left hand to be further away, and thus my wrist would end up being cocked, and looking un-natural. The photographs are shot using the usual Deployant setup of a Canon flash and a Profoto strobe. And were made either in the offices of the watch brands, or in boutiques, or in our studio.

The Bell & Ross BR 05 GMT. Night lume shot. This was taken with the HC 120 on the 907X on tripod, and used a long exposure of 10s. During the exposure, while the shutter was open, I hit the small Canon EX580II flash at low power twice to illuminate the watch. The image is basically noise free. and shows the lume of he watch, with a bit of the watch being visible on a very dark background.
The Moser Streamliner Perpetual Calendar. This was photographed with the HC 80 with H28 tube on the 907X. As discussed, the working distance is more comfortable for this selfie wrist shot. The watch bracelet is sized a bit too small for my wrist – pinching it, with the crown digging in. This was shot in the Moser Singapore office.
Casio Edifice with a carbon fibre dial photographed in our studio with the 907X with HC 120. The texture of the cross hatch carbon fiber on the dial is clearly visible. On large prints, the print on top of the lacquer which covers the carbon fiber is visible.
Horace Tourbillon 1. Photographed in our studio with 907X and HC 120. The camera is setup on a small table top tripod, but the watch is handled by hand. The shutter speed of 1/800th of a second in sync with the strobe freezes whatever motion my hand may have introduced. Shot at f/18 allows a magnitude of depth of field.
Tissot PRX Powermatic. The watch was perched on a small cushion inside the light box, which is darkened on the back and floor panels with black felt. 907X with HC 120.

Overall, I am very pleased with the images of the watches captured by the 907X 50C. The images have excellent detail, good dynamic range, and superb colour rendition which is accurate to what my eye see on the watches.

Architecture and cityscapes

Photographed mainly using the HCD 28 via XH Adapter and the 907X 50C. Hand holding this combination is quite natural, especially with the rear LCD in the 90 degree up position. Composing can be done using the LCD in place of a waist level finder. And the ability to zoom in the live view image for critical focusing of the manual focus lens is a boon. Focus is easy to achieve, but with longer lenses, especially as the 907X does not have IBIS, hand shake during focus check via zoom in is noticeable. This is easily solved by mounting the camera on a tripod, as is highly recommended for critical work.

Taken from the rooftop of Skyville – a residential project with the roof at level 45. This is the view of the city from that vantage point. Hasselblad 907X 50C with HCD 4/28. As noted, full EXIF is recorded, though the body is not identified, the CFV II 50C back is noted, as well as the lens used. This allows digital lens correction to be done in Phocus. Full shooting data is also captured.
Another rooftop. Here at a lower level is the rooftop parking lots. It rained the day before and a puddle of water gathered on the floor. This provided a nice reflection to the block of flats – People’s Park in the background. People’s Park was Singapore’s first mall, and was constructed in 1973. The center is in various stages of disrepair, but is still an operating mall. Hasselblad 907X 50C with HCD 4/28.
The Buddha Tooth Relic Temple in Singapore’s Chinatown. This was photographed from about 8 floors up, on a parapet. Hand held. I think the camera handles the transition from bright sunlight to the dark-ish shadows very well. Details and colour is retained in both sides of the image. Hasselblad 907X 50C with HCD 4/28.

Portrait

When I was testing the 503CW with my buddy Jimmy Sng, we walked around the Chinatown area. And came across this group of friends having drinks. They gamely posed with their cameras.

Hasselblad 907X 50C with HCD 4/28. This rather wide focal length – the full frame equivalent of about 21mm, is rather useful for group photographs, though it works well for smaller groups like this. The image is slightly cropped. They were bathed in nice, soft light from the very high translucent ceiling in the location.
At American Taprooms II, I shot this environment portrait of Winston Kwang, one of the owners and watch collector in front of the new bar. Also with the Hasselblad 907X 50C with HCD 4/28. hand held. As the bar was rather dark, the ISO was bumped to 3200. If you pixel peep, the dark areas below the beer taps can be rather noisy, but reduced to smaller sizes, it does not show up too aggressively. I find this image acceptable, even in print as large as a double page spread in a glossy magazine. Note that Winston is placed just slightly off center, as in a double page magazine spread, the page fold will be right in the center, and composing the subject in this way ensures that it does not fall into the gutter of the page divide. Also the air-conditioner at the top left can touched up to be darker in the print, and the space used as an area for title text. Here the rather extreme wide angle of the HC 28 is visible in converging lines, though the lens is rectilinear enough that the lines remain straight. This convergence is visible on the pillars and the bar display and is the physics of tilting the sensor up. I have chosen not to correct this in Phocus to give the view of a person sitting down in the table across the bar counter.
Hasselblad 907X 50C with HC 2.8/80. This is a portrait of a university buddy of mine. Taken in the very harsh florescent lighting of a club restaurant. Quick, hand held portrait shot with no fuss. At ISO 3200, the colours, especially the skin tones are spot on, and very natural. The aperture of f/2.8 is chosen to isolate the subject from the background.

Black and White

Though not a achromatic sensor, the 907X II 50C does do black and white documentary style photographs quite well. I shot these for a documentary project on the effects of the pandemic on the lives of ordinary Singaporeans. BW conversion for all images also done in Phocus.

Outdoors, and in bright sunlight. The Mapeltree business area was rather quiet. Shot hand held, the camera is tilted up slightly, and a small amount of keystone correction is applied in Phocus. Hasselblad 907X II 50C with HCD 4/28.

A popular place for traditional local kopi, Wangz has many outlets throughout the city. This one at Alexandra Retail Centre is one of our favourites. Eating in premises at the time the photograph was made was limited to a maximum of 5 fully vaccinated persons per group for restaurants. For coffee shops, like Wangz here, the max is 2 people per group, regardless of vaccination status. Normally at this timing, there will be hardly a place to sit and stay. But on that day, it was almost empty.

Hasselblad 907X II 50C with HCD 4/28.
Hasselblad 907X II 50C with HCD 4/28 at Marina Bay Sands. I photographed this after a photoshoot at one of the watch boutiques.

Concluding thoughts

The Hasselblad 907X II 50C is a beautiful package. The build quality is beyond reproach. And in usage, even without autofocus with older H Series lenses, the package with the XH Adapter feels nice on the hand and handles well. In our use case, it is lighter than the same lens on my usual H3D-39 body.

The 907X does not have a viewfinder, and though an optical viewfinder can be attached to top of the body, this is generally useful for wide angle lenses with focus set at a distance as it does not offer parallax correction. I did not get to try it. Thus, the only way to compose an image is via LiveView. As noted, this can prove to be a boon or a bane at the same time. LiveView does make the back feel a bit warm to the touch,. The camera has protection monitoring the temperature, shutting it down before it damages itself, though this never happened during my use.

With my old H lenses, prior firmware 18, focus can only be done manually. Focus peaking and focus check via magnification zoom in live view is available. Which is good, as this makes focusing easy and critical focus can be achieved. With newer H lenses, and native X lenses, as those I used in the X1D review, autofocus is available. And though reasonably fast for a medium format camera, is no match to blazing fast autofocus of the newer crop of full frame cameras like the Sony A1 or A9, or Nikon Z7 II, or Canon EOS R5. It is even slightly slower than the various Fujifilm GFX cameras.

The added benefit of the 907X II 50C is that the back is removable, and fully usable on old Hasselblad 500 Series camera bodies.

And finally, setup for studio use is not as slick as studio oriented cameras like Hasselblad’s H series or even X series cameras. But is usable.

Overall, the Hasselblad 907X II 50C is a very nice to use. The image quality is excellent, with very good dynamic range, and superb rendering of detail and colour. Micro tones and micro dynamics are handled very well.

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