I would like to take some nice photos this October before all leaves turn to shit but I have a bit of a dilemma. I don't have a decent camera. My phone, despite being a Sony, has a shit camera, with a shit stock app, with no Camera2 API, where I try to save myself with a GCam mod that's buggy and also shit. I also don't want to splurge out for a fancier newer camera right away since I don't know the first thing when it comes to photography.
However, I do have this.
A Canon PowerShot A580 from 2008.
Sure it's dated, lacks optical stabilization and is generally a PITA to use, but it still has a better sensor than my smartphone, and better optics as well. And since it's a PowerShot, you can
install CHDK on it to unlock more functionality, with the A580 being old enough for CHDK's version for it to be fairly mature. The menu through which you adjust the parameters is very fiddly, but it lets you do more than you could otherwise do with the camera, like fine tuning the focus, ISO and shutter speed.
One thing people love to do with CHDK is to adjust those parameters, set up the camera on a tripod, point it at the night sky during a thunderstorm, and
run a script that'll take a photo the moment one shows up on the sky. From what I've read once it's done correctly it's pretty reliable and gets some great results for an old compact camera like that.
It also lets you export DNG RAW's, and right now it's the only device that I own that can do so. I've taken a test photo with it enabled to see what I could do with them.
This is the photo as the camera has processed with it's built-in software.
Then, I tried loading the RAW into RawTherapee, however it really does not like these RAW's, at all. This is how it got imported:
All the colors completely out of place and I have no idea where I'd have to go in the UI to correct them. So I'm definitely not gonna use that.
Next, I tried Darktable, and despite it being apparently harder than RawTherapee, I found it's UI to be slightly more intuitive, and most importantly, it imported the RAW correctly.
After a bit of fiddling this was the end result:
All of this of course was eyeballed with blind slider fiddling on an uncalibrated IPS monitor, but it's not like the source material was high grade in the first place. I think I did a pretty neat job with it either way.
I'll try taking some more pictures while I still can to get the hang of it, and maybe by the next October I'll figure it out enough to be able to take something much nicer. I don't have much hopes for this year.