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An electronic viewfinder (EVF) is a camera viewfinder that displays the image taken by the lens on a small screen for the photographer to see while framing their shot.
It is smaller and shielded from ambient light than a live preview screen, and it might even consume less power. The sensor captures the image coming through the lens, processes it, and then projects the image onto a tiny display that can be seen through the eyepiece.
Both digital still cameras and digital video cameras employ digital viewfinders. When the viewfinder is close to the eye, some cameras (such those made by Panasonic, Sony, and Fujifilm) contain an automated eye sensor that changes the display from screen to EVF.
Simpler cameras flip between displays using a button. Some don’t even have a button. The built-in EVF on many cameras is fixed in place and can only be used by holding the camera up to the user’s eye, which may not be practical.
Other cameras either don’t have an EVF at all or have a subpar one. In these circumstances, it is occasionally possible to obtain a separate, attachable EVF.
The global Electronic Viewfinder (EVF) market accounted for $XX Billion in 2022 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2023 to 2030.
According to SIGMA, the New 61 Megapixel fp L & EVF-11 Electronic Viewfinder has been released. Sigma introduced the fp L, a sibling model rather than a replacement, in response to our evaluation of the fp.
Although it first resembles the Sigma fp, you’ll soon notice two intriguing changes: Inside is a 61-megapixel sensor, and a side-mounted EVF is an option. It is extremely impressive for an 8K and 4K RAW capable (stills) camera.
A thrilling update that I was yearning for as a photographer of untamed landscapes—and one that all video photographers would probably swoon over, too—is that you can now power the camera directly via USB-C, rather than just charging the battery while the camera is off. Hooray!
Last but not least, the sensor inside is no longer a modest 24 megapixels, but a huge 61 megapixels, even though the video specifications appear to be largely the same (4K 30p RAW video is probably the highlight for most people).
Yes, Sigma has equaled the resolution of the Sony A7R IV, the highest-resolution full-frame camera on the market.