Photkina 2010: A report in pictures

As I previously announced, yesterday I spent the day visiting photokina 2010 in Cologne, and I brought back with me a huge load of impressions, pictures of latest models, of prototypes, and other stuff. So without much ado, here’s my report on the fair — by manufacturer, in alphabetic order.

Photokina 2010 south entrance

General impressions from the fair will be posted in a seperate gallery soon.

CAUTION! Massive amount of pictures ahead! Make sure your connection is fast enough, and that you have enough time! :-)

Continue reading Photkina 2010: A report in pictures

Considerations: Leica M8 vs. Olympus E-P1

The Olympus E-P1 is a lovely little camera. It’s small, it’s light, it’s extraordinarily good-looking, it has great, almost DSLR-like image quality and with the Panasonic Lumix 20/1.7 pancake lens attached is the close-to-ideal allround camera.

Yet, the Leica M8 is stealing its show. Now that I have that M-Rokkor 28/2.8 on the M8, I get approximately the same field-of-view as with the Lumix on the E-P1. And the M8 is just sooo much more fun to use! Also, its output is miles ahead from that of the E-P1.

Since I’ve got the little M-Rokkor, the E-P1 is sitting on a shelf, collecting dust. Yup, even indoors in bad light I’ve been using the Rokkor at f/2.8 and ISO 2500 with shutterspeed down to 1/30 sec. Did I miss the E-P1 and the 20/1.7’s speed? Not once!

Okay, so here’s what I’m going to do. I’ll see for how long I’m going to be happy with the M8 alone. As I’m rarely ever using a tele lens (except for holidays), I actually don’t have much use for the E-P1, anyways. When my 50/1.5 Nokton arrives, I’ll also have a fast lens suitable for portraits and available light photography. The questions to ask will be: Can I live with only one camera? Do I need a fast wider-than-normal lens such as the Lumix 20/1.7? Do I need a tele lens such as the Lumix 45-200? Do I need an ultrawide lens such as the Olympus 9-18? Or could I make do with adding a 12/5.6 or 15/4.5 Voigtländer Heliar and a 90mm to my M8 kit? Depending on the outcome, I will have to consider whether I’ll be keeping the E-P1 or not, whether I’ll be keeping it all the lenses or with just one or two, whether I’ll be adding new lenses to my E-P1 or M8 setup, or both.

I’ll keep you posted!

The Minolta M-Rokkor 28/2.8 on the Leica M8

The Minolta M-Rokkor 28/2.8 on the Leica M8 | Olympus E-P1 + Lumix 20/1.7 @ f/1.7, 1/60 sec, ISO 640

I’ve been writing about this – I decided to part with my wonderful Zeiss Biogon 2/35 in favor of a 28mm and a 50mm lens. Having only one focal length just was too restricting for me. Also, it was only semi-fast, and its angle-of-view was too narrow for a walkaround lens, and too wide for a portrait lens.

My first purchase for my new lens setup was a Minolta M-Rokkor 28mm f/2.8, the wide-angle lens originally introduced with the Minolta CLE film rangefinder back in the 70’s. On the M8 with its 1.33x crop factor, this translates roughly to a 37mm equivalent angle-of-view – the classic, semi-wide reportage focal length, thus.

Continue reading The Minolta M-Rokkor 28/2.8 on the Leica M8

Picture of the day (August 31, 2010)

Just when we thought summer was over, the sun and warmth came back – and even some flowers I hadn’t seen before! It’s like spring again …

"Remnants of summer" | Olympus E-P1 + Lumix 20/1.7 @ f/1.7, 1/1000 sec, ISO 200

Picture of the day (August 29, 2010)

“Life ain’t a movie!” Marburg, Germany, old market. Processed in Lightrom 3.2 RC, using the “CP3” cross-processing filter.

"La vita non è un film" | Olympus E-P1 + M.Zuiko 14-42/3.5-5.6 @ 34mm, f/5.1, 1/50 sec, ISO 1250