📷 Elevate Your Visual Storytelling!
The Panasonic Lumix GH5 is a high-performance mirrorless camera featuring a 20.3MP Micro Four Thirds sensor, capable of recording 4K video at various frame rates. Its robust magnesium alloy body ensures durability, while advanced stabilization technology allows for exceptional photo and video quality, making it an ideal choice for professional photographers and videographers.
Metering Methods | Center-Weighted Average, Multiple, Spot |
Exposure Control | aperture-priority, shutter-speed-priority, manual-and-automatic |
White Balance Settings | Auto |
Self Timer | 10 seconds |
Crop Mode | Micro Four Thirds |
Screen Size | 3.2 Inches |
Display Type | LCD |
Display Fixture Type | Articulating |
Display Resolution Maximum | 1620 |
Has Color Screen | Yes |
Flash Memory Type | SD / SDHC / SDXC |
Memory Slots Available | 2 |
Write Speed | up to 300 MB/s |
Compatible Mountings | Micro Four Thirds |
Sensor Type | CMOS |
Image stabilization | Sensor-Shift, 5-Axis |
Maximum Aperture | 4 f |
Expanded ISO Minimum | 80 |
Photo Sensor Resolution | 20.3 MP |
Photo Sensor Size | Micro Four Thirds |
Maximum Shutter Speed | 8 seconds |
Minimum Shutter Speed | 1/8000 seconds |
Form Factor | Mirrorless |
Special Feature | Brightness Control |
Color | Black |
Item Weight | 1.6 Pounds |
Video Resolution | 4K UHD 2160p |
Viewfinder | Electronic |
Flash Modes | Red Eye Reduction, Automatic |
Camera Flash | Hot Shoe |
Skill Level | Professional |
Compatible Devices | Wi-Fi and Bluetooth enabled devices, SD card readers, devices with HDMI inputs |
Continuous Shooting | 12 |
Audio Input | Microphone |
Flash Sync Speed | 1/250 Second |
Video Capture Format | MP4, MOV |
Battery Weight | 1 Grams |
Delay between shots | 0.08 seconds |
Audio Output Type | Headphone |
Battery Cell Type | Lithium Ion |
Battery Type | 1 x DMW-BLF19 Rechargeable Lithium-Ion, 7.2 VDC, 1860 mAh |
Processor Description | venus engine |
Water Resistance Level | Water Resistant |
Aspect Ratio | 16:9 |
File Format | JPEG, Raw |
Effective Still Resolution | 20.3 MP |
JPEG Quality Level | Basic, Fine, Normal |
Supported Image Format | AVCHD, JPEG, MP4, MPEG-4, RAW |
Bit Depth | 10 Bit |
Total Still Resolution | 20.3 MP |
Optical Zoom | 1 x |
Lens Type | Fisheye |
Zoom | Depth from Defocus |
Camera Lens | Leica DG Vario-Elmart 12-60mm f/2.8-4 ASPH. POWER O.I.S. Lens |
Minimum Focal Length | 7.87 Inches |
Digital Zoom | 4 x |
Number of Diaphragm Blades | 9 |
Lens Construction | 14 Elements in 12 Groups |
Photo Filter Size | 62 Millimeters |
Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, HDMI |
Wireless Technology | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
Total USB 2.0 Ports | 1 |
Total USB 3.0 Ports | 2 |
Total USB Ports | 2 |
Shooting Modes | Expressive, Retro, Old Days, High Key, Low Key, Sepia, Monochrome, Dynamic Monochrome, Rough Monochrome, Silky Monochrome, Impressive Art, High Dynamic, Cross Process, Toy Effect, Toy Pop, Bleach Bypass, Miniature Effect, Soft Focus, Fantasy, Star Filter, One Point Color, Sunshine |
Digital-Still | Yes |
Movie Mode | Yes |
Image Capture Type | Stills & Video |
Night vision | No |
Auto Focus Technology | Eye Detection |
Focus Features | AFS (Single) / AFF (Flexible) / AFC (Continuous) / MF |
Autofocus Points | 225 |
Focus Type | Depth from Defocus |
Focus Mode | Continuous-Servo AF (AF-C) |
Autofocus | Yes |
B**G
The Lumix GH5 is a professional-grade mirrorless camera
The Lumix GH5 is a professional-grade mirrorless camera that has been designed to meet the needs of serious photographers and videographers. With a 20.3-megapixel sensor, 4K video recording, and advanced autofocus system, the GH5 is a versatile and powerful camera that can handle a wide range of shooting scenarios.One of the standout features of the GH5 is its video capabilities. It can shoot 4K video at up to 60 frames per second, making it one of the few cameras on the market that can do so. This makes it an ideal choice for videographers who need high-quality footage that can be used in professional settings.The GH5 also has a high-quality autofocus system that is both fast and accurate. It can track subjects quickly and effectively, making it ideal for action and sports photography. Additionally, the camera has a fast burst mode that can capture up to 12 frames per second, making it a great choice for capturing fast-moving subjects.Another great feature of the GH5 is its image stabilization system. The camera has a 5-axis in-body stabilization system that works in conjunction with lenses that have optical stabilization to produce incredibly steady footage and still images. This makes it a great choice for handheld shooting or situations where a tripod is not practical.The camera also has a rugged, weather-sealed body that can withstand harsh conditions. This makes it an ideal choice for outdoor photographers and videographers who need a camera that can handle extreme temperatures and inclement weather.Overall, the Lumix GH5 is an excellent choice for anyone who needs a versatile and powerful camera that can handle a wide range of shooting scenarios. Its high-quality video capabilities, fast autofocus system, and rugged body make it an ideal choice for professional photographers and videographers who need a camera that can handle whatever they throw at it.
C**E
One Camera to Rule Them All?
I will update this review as time goes on. At this point I have only experimented with the camera for several hours, but I already have enough information to form a solid foundation for a review (I have also used the GH4 for a few years). I run a small video production company, and for years I have used the GH4 for capturing high quality video. The problem is that every video shoot also requires several high quality/professional photographs. While the GH4 excelled in capturing video as a true camera it always came up short. As a result, I was always forced to lug my Nikon D750 around with me. I would travel with two cameras, and two sets of lenses. Occasionally, I would substitute the Nikon for my Fujix100T or I would substitute the GH4 for my Osmo Pro (recently it has been more of the later). What I need... want... would love .... is camera to do all of it. I guess I could invest in the FF Sony, but the idea of investing in a 3rd set of lenses doesn't exactly excite me. At some point.... either the video on the Olympus will come up... or the photo stills on the Panasonic will improve...right? Based on my tests - I think the GH5 will become my Holy Grail of cameras. I have 0% doubt that it will perform for video (and my the couple of tests I have run look very favorable), but my worry was IQ. The new 20.3MP resolution has me hopeful that the GH5 will become my one camera for all purposes. Photos - Again - I will update this as time goes on - The upgraded sensor seems to make a large difference.In the photos I attached the 1st picture was taken at ISO 400 while the rest were at ISO 1600. Frankly, I always got nervous taking my GH4 above ISO 800 the noise and grain really started to become noticeable. The GH5 looks very usable at ISO 1600 ( I need to check ISO 3200 a little closer). For full disclosure the ISO 1600 shots were taken with the Panasonic Leica f1.2 42.5mm gem of a lens. This is a good point for a tangent,. The reason why i like the MFT format (in addition to the cameras being physically smaller) there are some very excellent lenses out there. I would stack the Olymous Zuiko lenses up against the branded Nikon lenses any day of the week. In addition, ignoring the difference in focal length my Panasonic/Leica f1.2 42.5 rivals my Otus f1.4 55mm for my Nikon (plus it has vibration reduction AND autofocus - eat your heart out Sigma). These high quality lenses are smaller and cost less than their full frame rivals to boot. Now there are some poor lenses too, but if you are willing to pay a little more I have found all of the Panny/Leica and Olympus Zuiko lenses to be very, very good.Other notes - - If you shoot in RAW and use Lightroom you will have to update to 6.9. - The autofocus really is improved. It is very fast on the point.- Has the ability to do focus stacking - I haven't tried this yet - but it is a very interesting function. - Shooting manual is a breeze - I am not sure why Nikon can't copy Panasonic's focus peaking, but if they could... they should. I mentioned I owned the Otus f1.4 55mm.... that lenses would be soooooo much more useful if Nikon offered a similar type of focus peaking.- Low light performance - others may disagree, but I do think that it is better than the GH4. I have very good stills at ISO 1600. However, this might be a counter-intuitive since Panasonic is using the same sized sensor but increasing the resolution. In order for the camera to have better low light performance and higher resolution would require either significantly better algorithms and/or improvements on the actual sensor gathers the light. - Button placement and layout are still very solid. it is easy to navigate WB and ISO settings without moving your eyes (much more difficult on my Nikon D750).- No built in flash. Honestly, I can not remember the last time I used a built in flash.- The camera is not too much larger than the GH4, but it is noticeably heavier. This camera is dense, and while it still has an advantage over my full frame it's losing ground here.Video- - My early footage is excellent. The continuous autofocus is improved (although I do need to run a lot more tests on this one). I loved shooting footage with my GH4, but I usually filmed in manual focus. I never fully trusted the GH4 autofocus - it seemed to spend too much time searching.- The ability to shoot at 180 FPS (you have first select a variable frame rate to get into this menu).- Out of the box it will allow you to record 10 bit straight to SD card (I recommend the new high transfer rate cards).- Image stability - I am very excited for the improvements - but I definitely need to do a lot of testing to see how it really performs.- In short... for video the GH5 will do everything that GH4 will do, but it adds the ability to capture 10 bit footage directly to a SD card, offers weather protection, and in-body stabilization- The screen and viewfinder are excellent.Final Verdict - Again, I will have to update this review - there is MUCH still to be covered (especially for video). However, the early results are very promising and I do believe that Panasonic has made a significant improvement in IQ over the GH4. I may be naive, but I just ASSUMED it would be great for video (minor improvements in the GH4 would have helped maintain its status). The GH5 is roughly double the price of the GH4 so you will need to understand if the photo improvements and the upgrades in video are really worth it to you. For me... it is a no-brainer.... and I am optimistic that for now on I will be carrying just one camera with me!5 Stars
B**L
Stunningly Beautiful 60 Frames Per Second UHD Videos
Rather than discuss how this camera compares to other similar cameras, I'll focus on my experiences moving up from a smaller camera. My previous choices were all about small size and high built in zoom: if you don't have a camera with you because it's a big nuisance, it's useless. I'm currently using this camera with a Panasonic H-H020A LUMIX G Ultra-Portable Pancake Lens, 20mm/F1.7 ASPH F1.7. The zoom is very close to what the eye sees. Instead of lugging a big expensive zoom lens around on this camera, my wife now carries our small zoom camera. I haven't missed the zoom: just move closer. The camera pouch I bought (DURAGADGET Lightweight & Ultra-Portable Carry Case) still permits carrying this camera with pancake lens on a belt loop. I am now carrying this camera either in a backpack with tripod, directly on the tripod, or by the handle of the pouch when I'm not wearing a belt. I'm a smallest aperture, low ISO (400 appears to be the camera's native sensitivity), long shutter time kind of guy. I cycle my photographs on a large screen TV (on when we're home) at 30 second intervals using the Kodi program fed from a dedicated home theater computer that is running 24/7. Blurry backgrounds in portrait photos on the large screen annoy me and I set up to prevent them. This means using a tripod with the 10 second delay and manually focusing on the person while also viewing a sharp background. In manual focus mode this camera shows a lot of sparkly blue dots for the areas that are in focus and has an option for a digital zoom in on the important area to help with sharp focusing. The 2 second delay for stills without a tripod works very well and is my default. When shooting with manual aperture and manual shutter, these options are easily operated by the top and rear rotation wheels. I just leave the aperture at 16. There is a simple bar graph that shows the optimal shutter speed required. If it gets down to 1/60 second, then I know a tripod is required. If the light is low and I don't have a tripod, then I switch the camera to automatic and just have to accept the resulting graininess and reduced depth of field of the image. I use the built in digital viewfinder with the very helpful horizontal level as the flip out panel acts like a wind sail. The 4K (actually UHD) video recording at 60 frames per second is the main reason I selected this camera. It works great as long as the camera is situated on a heavy tripod that prevents wind vibration. The videos do have some trouble with high ISO graininess early in the sunrises and late in the sunsets. I keep a circular polarizing filter on the camera except when the light is low, or the shots are indoors. Daylight UHD videos are stunningly beautiful and clearly exceed UHD broadcast quality. I tried the 400 Mbps video mode, but it steps down to 30 frames per second and I couldn't see any difference in the color quality on my new TV. The difference between 60 fps and 30 fps is very noticeable and I always use the 60 fps selection. A fabulous camera that I would buy again and doesn't need a big nuisance lens.
A**R
Love this beast! Amazing Versatile! Loaded with features!
The LUMIX GH5 is a dream come true! Panasonic has hit a huge home run with this camera! Cinema 4K recording at 24fps internally! 4K at 60fps 8bit 150mps internally! 400mps with update coming soon! 180fps in full 1080 FHD internally! The slow motion on this camera is buttery smooth! The size and grip is fantastic! What it's raining out? No problem this camera with the Leica 12-60mm lens is water resistant! It's also free resistant for shooting in low temperatures! Battery life is way better than the Sony's but not as good as the GH4 with how fast this camera processes it uses more juice. So be sure to pick up some spare batteries. Dual memory cards that can be hot swapped so you can continue constant recording with no overheating! Very grainless recording up to 1600 ISO. With additional purchase you can shoot in VlogL with a dynamic range of 12 stops when shooting at a native ISO of 400. Internal audio level meters, very good mic for this size of camera onboard. Zebras, focus assist, waveform and vector scope meters are all onboard. There are many customizable buttons and the view finder flips out, up, down and forward toward the lens is super bright and clear and also a touchscreen! The menus are very easy to navigate and well thought out! There is now 5 axis image stabilization on the sensor and if you are using a lens like the Leica 12-60mm it has power IOS. So you get two levels of stabilization working together. What does that mean? That means you can walk and record rock steady video! There has been a lot of controversy over the autofocus but I have found if you put it on either face detect or single point and press the shutter half way down to get it to lock on first it works very well. All in all this is an amazing camera for the price! For all the features and how well this works in the field I'd be happy if I spent twice the price! Go create something amazing!
C**N
Great mirrorless camera, especially for video
I am a professional photographer who got into videography fairly recently (within the last year or so) and while the camera I shoot photos with records in 4K, I really wanted a camera that would shoot in 4K/60FPS based on the types of things I shoot. In the end my decision came down to either the GH5 or GH5s, both of which can shoot 4K60 - but the primary differences between them (for me) were that the GH5 had spectacular in-body axis stabilization which the GH5s lacks, while the GH5s performs extremely well in low-light which is an area where the original GH5 struggles a bit. Eventually I went with the GH5 over the GH5s - for me, the stabilization was (and has been) much more important than the low-light performance and so I'm really glad I chose the GH5. The articulating rear LCD screen is great (it's also nice that it's a touchscreen) and has so many useful applications for shooting video. The battery life for this camera seems good to me - with a fully-charged Panasonic battery I can probably get about 2-3 hours of on-and-off shooting.The biggest issue with this camera in my opinion is its autofocus. The GH5 uses contrast-based AF rather than phase-detection AF, which is simply not as good. It works, and in a lot of situations it works well. But there have also been a number of situations I've found myself in where I've seen and felt firsthand how the camera can struggle to determine and achieve focus, as well as reviewing my recordings in post and coming across footage that I thought was in proper focus when filming but wasn't. There are a number of different autofocus modes, many of which are good and I think their inclusion of these modes helps to offset some of the drawbacks of their contrast-based AF. Still, don't expect this camera to autofocus as well as a Canon or Sony, because in my experience their AF technology is far superior. But the autofocus in the GH5 is totally usable, especially if you're around the prosumer level in the video realm. If you're a professional, to be completely honest you'll probably need the more advanced AF that you'd find on a Canon or Sony body.
B**T
Professional Videographer - Love this camera
This camera is a powerhouse for the price. Full disclosure, my first camera was a Panasonic SD camcorder back in 2005, then switched to a Canon Pro camcorder in 2009, then jumped on the Panasonic train again with the GH3 and was using them until I picked up the GH5.The image is amazing, but that's not news. What is news - and hopefully will not be overlooked - is how much this camera is amazing to use. Custom buttons. Focus peaking (so amazing when shooting at f1.4 to f0.95 when you're changing focus during a shot). Image stabilization (I shot my last wedding 90% handheld with non IS lenses and the footage is gorgeous.) This camera fixes all the frustrations I had with the GH3 (which really were lack of stabilization and lack of focus peaking) and upgrades the image amazingly.With weddings I typically don't even mess with 400mbps, I usually go 150mbps 60p or 24p depending on if I want to slow it down or not, and it's phenomenal.Coming from the GH3 and Camcorders - the GH5's low light makes me so happy. It isn't legendary compared to other cameras - so I've heard. But I briefly owned an A6500 and used it in low light situations and it fell apart worse than the GH5 does in similar circumstances. (wedding receptions I'm lookin' at you).For commercial work I'll crank up the bit rate and color depth and it's awesome. This is such a fun camera to use. I love the freedom I had with camcorders to hand-hold and not be tethered to a tripod or monopod for long periods. I still use those tools as I need to, but not always needing them allows me to be much faster and much less conspicuous at weddings (people think I'm a photographer and don't worry about what they're doing as much). The stabilization is better than the A6500's as well. I took that to comic-con last year and didn't love the IBIS.All to say, as a professional in the wedding and web commercial industries, this is a powerhouse of a camera. Pair it with either a speedbooster and fast glass, or voigtlander 0.95 primes and you're set to create beautiful imagery without the camera getting in the way. (No overheating or other issues that competitors deal with).
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