

To get a handle on the GR III's low-light chops, I recently headed to the tourist town of Gatlinburg, Tennessee, as well as nearby downtown Knoxville, on several consecutive evenings. A trip (or three!) to downtown Knoxville and Gatlinburg for some low-light shooting I also want to take a look at the GR III's video capture feature set, and to give its wireless communications a quick spin as well. You'll also find a discussion of the real-world importance of ithe GR III's somewhat abbreviated battery life in that earlier article.įor this second test, we'll be looking at how image quality fares in low-light shooting once the sensitivity ramps up, and how well the sensor-shift image stabilization system performs. If you've not already seen that earlier test, you'll want to start the story there for a look at how the handsome, magnesium alloy-bodied GR III handles in real-world shooting, and what I think of its ergonomics and daytime image quality.

When I recently published my first field test of the Ricoh GR III, I promised another test to come, with a look at some features I'd not had time for in that first article. Click thumbnail for JPEG, or here for raw file
