The Big Reveal: A High-Speed Hybrid With Breakthrough Slow-Motion Capability, the Z6III Is a Creative Powerhouse
Nikon Ambassador Deborah Sandidge was intrigued by the idea of being able to photograph a very familiar subject in a very different way. Her frequent subject is birds, and she’s comfortable creating still images and video of them in the wild as well as her own backyard. The Z6III, however, offered up something entirely new: seeing them in slow motion at 240 frames per second.
Deb, who typically shoots slow motion at 120 fps, immediately got the significance of the difference. “There are motions, turns, reactions that happen in fractions of a second that you never see with your eyes,” she says. “There’s no way to normally perceive or experience those moments. The beauty of 240 frames per second is that you’re revealing incredible details you could never see before.”
Deb also quickly realized that the Z6III wasn’t an upgrade. It had its own features and capabilities, its own identity. “The Z6III is far beyond an upgrade—it’s in its own realm.”
Versatility Plus
In addition to its video capabilities, the 24.5-megapixel Z6III is a remarkable camera for fast-action still photography. It’ll handle low- and changing-light conditions with ease, and its incredibly fast autofocus makes it ideal for wildlife.
A major surprise was the camera’s startlingly bright electronic viewfinder. “The viewfinder is how you make decisions because it’s really how you’re able to reference what’s happening,” Deb says. “I could see so clearly what was going on, and what works and doesn’t work in the frame—I saw it instantly, everything clear and bright, and I could make adjustments based on that view.”
The Z6III far beyond an upgrade—it’s in its own realm.
Speaking of bright, Deb found that the camera’s low-light performance came into play for subjects much different from birds. “I did really well photographing stars in the night sky from my backyard, and, from the front yard, a space launch from the Cape. I was surprised—I didn’t know what I’d get, but the camera handled it beautifully. Now I want to lean into that more, and I wouldn’t be surprised if people will want to try some astrophotography with this camera.”
Deb shot with a number of NIKKOR Z lenses on the Z6III, including the NIKKOR Z 180-600mm f/5.6-6.3 VR (with and without the Z Teleconverter TC-1.4x), the NIKKOR Z 800mm f/6.3 VR S, the NIKKOR Z 600mm f/6.3 VR S and the NIKKOR Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR. “The 800mm—that’s pretty much the range where ‘the wild’ is for me. And the 28-400mm is a beautiful lens to work with—I can see people putting it on the Z6III and having the perfect one-camera, one-lens stills/video combination for travel.”
Easy Entry
Deb feels that when it comes to video, the Z6III offers more than incredible slow-motion results. It inspires entry into video because of those results.
“Sometimes people are interested in video, but they can be intimidated,” she says. “This camera is an easy entry because when they see all the details of motion and action that 240 fps captures, they’re going to want to be able to do that. And it’s not difficult: set the camera for 240 fps, hand-hold or stabilize the camera, just as you would for stills, and shoot.
It's a camera that makes quality video very accessible—it’s easy to work with and easy to post process. I did no color grading with the videos—no need to, the colors were beautiful. There’s more to learn, of course, but when I got into video, I loved it because I was learning something new every day. I was captivated by what I could do, and what I could create.”
For Deb, slow-motion video has its own special appeal.
“There’s magic in the slow-motion world,” she says. “Something a bird does, an action that’s, say, a few seconds long, doesn’t even process to our eyes. But when you slow that down, you see something you weren’t even aware happened, something absolutely gorgeous. That’s the magic—discovering something in a familiar subject, something you weren’t aware of. It could be a kid swinging a baseball bat; almost any ordinary thing can take on a magical aspect. Slow-motion video also adds to the story you can tell with stills. A series of stills and a video that goes with them—that’s a better experience and a better story.”
Ultimately, the Z6III’s creative potential is its most compelling feature. “I think what makes the camera so desirable is what you can do with it—how easy it is for someone to step into the slow-motion video world and discover what can be done, all the while doing that with a camera with so many advanced features for still photography.”
The features and capabilities of the extraordinary Z6III are showcased in stills and videos here in the See Z6III in Action section. Deborah Sandidge’s stills and videos are featured at her website, deborahsandidge.com; on Instagram, at X (formerly Twitter); and Facebook.