Pricing and availability of Sigma DP1 Merrill announced

Sigma announced the price and availability of their 46MP Sigma DP1 Merrill camera: you can buy the camera next month for $999. The DP1 model has a 19mm f/2.8 lens (equivalent to 28mm), the already available DP2 version has a 30mm f/2.8 lens (45mm equivalent). Sample images from the DP1 can be found here.

Press release:

Sigma Corporation announces pricing and availability of Sigma DP1 Merrill
New generation compact camera to hit US shelves in September for street price of $999

Ronkonkoma, NY, August 31, 2012 – Sigma Corporation of America (www.sigmaphoto.com), a leading researcher, developer, manufacturer and service provider for some of the world's most impressive lines of lenses, cameras and flashes, has announced that the Sigma DP1 Merrill compact digital camera will be available in the United States in mid-September for the street price of $999.

This upgraded, high-resolution, compact digital camera with a fixed lens is named in honor of Richard “Dick” Merrill, the co-creator of the Foveon X3 Direct Image Sensor technology that powers Sigma’s unique lineup of cameras. It differs from its predecessor, the DP1x, because its lens now includes one “F” Low Dispersion glass element to correct aberrations, and its resolution has grown by moving from Foveon’s 14.6-megapixel APS-C size image sensor to the 46-megapixel APS-C image sensor found in the company’s flagship SLR, the Sigma SD1 Merrill. The full-color Foveon X3 direct image sensor ensures outstanding resolution, richly gradated tones and images with a three-dimensional feel. A focus ring and custom Quick Set (QS) mode also improve the user interface.

“We are extremely pleased with the engineering and design involved in the upgrade of the DP1 Merrill,” said Mark Amir-Hamzeh, president of Sigma Corporation of America. “Its wide focal length, fixed lens and impressive sensor capture stunningly sharp images that are truly incredible, especially given the compact nature of the camera’s design.”

The Sigma DP1 Merrill boasts an exclusively designed, high-performance, telecentric 19mm F2.8 lens, which is the equivalent to a 28mm lens on a 35mm SLR camera.This camera differs from the DP2 Merrill, which was released in June, due to its wider focal length. The DP2 Merrill has a 30mm F2.8 lens, which is the equivalent to a 45mm lens on a 35mm SLR camera. Both cameras are compact and lightweight, and feature Super Multi Layer Coating to reduce flare and ghosting.

Other features of the Sigma DP1 Merrill camera include:

· A dual, three-layer responsive ultimate (TRUE II) engine thatnow incorporates two TRUE II processors toimprove the processing speed and overall quality of the final image
· RAW and JPEG format recording toretain the full image detail of the utmost quality captured through the direct image sensor, as well as a JPEG recording format for convenience
· Sigma Photo Pro processing software to convert RAW data quickly and easily
· Manual focus for use when autofocus or focus-lock is not desired
· Easy-to-use auto focus with a “nine-point select mode” which can select the desired focusing point from nine different frames, and a “free move mode” that allows shooters to select their desired focusing point
· An advanced user interface complete with acustom QS menu and the metallic command dial to improve usability
· Continuous shooting capabilities to capture up to seven RAW images per sequence
· A large, highly visible, three-inch TFT color LCD monitor for great visibility
· A hot shoe for the use of the dedicated external flashgun EF-140DG (optional)
· Movie mode for movie recording with VGA (640×480) size, with 30 shooting frames per second

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  • pooh

    They seem to be well aware of the high ISO capability of their X3 cameras, as you can’t find the ISO range anywhere including the specification page on the cameras’ own website.

    • fjfjjj

      The effective theoretical adjusted nominal maximum ISO is 1,048,576. Trying to compare effective theoretical adjusted nominal maximum ISO with the ISO of any other camera is futile.

  • http://www.le-dictionnaire-de-maths.com/ Duncan Dimanche

    WHY ON EARTH don’t they make it an interchangeable camera?
    Who will buy it… at this price… with a 28mm…..

    make it a canon or nikon mount Sigma and then I might have a thought on it…. how frustrating… i’m not angry but just sad for the whole Sigma line up…. and just think about it… They do make sigma lenses with Nikon mounts or Canon… Do u think that they are not being aloud to or Nikon is asking too much for the use of the mount?

    It just doesn’t make sense why Sigma is so stubborn with there mount….

    Cheers

    • Louis

      Duncan, you’re right in one thing. Sigma should do a camera with Nikon or Canon lens mount so we can use it with the best lenses of those brrands and, more important, with Zeiss and Schneider superb glasses!!
      Can you imagine this Foveon sensor with a Schneider PC TS Super Angulon?! or with a Zeiss Distagon?! This combination would be AMAZING!! Medium Format Like… sorry Nikon D800e.

      But, you should see the sample images of the DP1 Merrill… it has an excellent lens, no need of other one.

      • http://genotypewritings.blogspot.com genotypewriter

        “Can you imagine this Foveon sensor with a Schneider PC TS Super Angulon?!”

        No… you’ve got it mixed up. Foveon sensors are the forgiving type, unlike Bayer sensors. So that’s why even the cheaper Sigma lenses look amazingly good on their sensors.

        At the same time, as spectacular as they look, Schneider’s PC-TS lenses aren’t that much special when it comes to their optics. Try one and see.

      • http://www.le-dictionnaire-de-maths.com/ Duncan D

        Louis.
        I yes that’s is exactly my point… it is sad to see such technology on such a small body but not being able to put what ever lens un want….. a 28mm is not versatile…. even a 50mm would have been better to my taste…. but common a 28mm….

        I’m not arguing on the quality of the lenses or the sensor but just the use of it…

        Oh and the price…. hahah

        Cheers

  • Mike

    Sigma is on crack. That’s the only way I can understand how they set their prices. $1000? Maybe in 2006. So many great and good ILC right now that don’t have the handicaps that Sigma has. Sigma, you’re not Leica. You’re the flabby guy who looks in the mirror and sees a stud.

    • http://haroldellis4444@gmail.com Harold Ellis

      they dont care really. their only real income is from 18-xxx soccer mom’s lenses.

  • fjfjjj

    Get a grip, Sigma. And by a grip, I mean that a $1000 camera should have a little bit of rubber or leather where I hold it.

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