Light packing, high quality photography?
I'm interested in stepping up from my P&S digital to something with a larger sensor and interchangeable lenses (I'm not too concerned with camera speed). The bulk of my photographs are taken while traveling (either abroad or domestically) and I typically travel very light when I go out each day (no backpack or shoulder bag). While I would try to keep the lens count to a minimum while traveling, it would be nice to have a camera with flexibility for things like a good macro lens while I'm around home.
I shoot some film (usually just locally, but sometimes when I travel) and have cameras in a variety of form factors for film (SLR, rangefinder, dual-lens, pinhole).
I've been considering the new Olympus E-P1 as possibly the best compromise for my light-packing and laid-back travel style with stepping up my image quality potential. (I'm waiting for a local shop to get one in stock so I can try it out.)
What are your experiences with traveling light with a non-P&S camera? Any recommendations?
I shoot some film (usually just locally, but sometimes when I travel) and have cameras in a variety of form factors for film (SLR, rangefinder, dual-lens, pinhole).
I've been considering the new Olympus E-P1 as possibly the best compromise for my light-packing and laid-back travel style with stepping up my image quality potential. (I'm waiting for a local shop to get one in stock so I can try it out.)
What are your experiences with traveling light with a non-P&S camera? Any recommendations?
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The Four-Thirds cameras are also reasonable in size for travel and so are their lenses if you stay with the consumer grades. The best lenses are a chunk (but worth it IMO).
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Unlike you though I use a bag (a RedOxx gator) when wandering around for glasses/mp3/water bottle so the G1 and sometimes extra lens goes in there. I've also shoved it in the front pocket of my laptop bag without any problems. The biggest plus for me (more than the size) is the weight. Much lighter than my previous DSLRs.
Obvioulsy this all assumes you're not going to start accumulating and carrying lenses around. Dedicated m4/3 mount lens selection is pretty limited at the moment (should improve by end of year if rumors are to be believed) but it's worth keeping in mind that you can mount pretty much any legacy lens via adapters and a lot of them work very effectively. Manual focus obviously. So on the macro front I've been looking for a Canon FD macro.
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Good luck with whatever you decide to go with.
5D2/1D MkII N/40D and a couple bits of glass.
Thanks for the thoughts - the G1 is another option (a features/size/cost comparison to the E-P1) and I'm keeping it under consideration.
My film SLRs are Canon FD mount (AT-1 and AE-1) and I already own an FD mount 90mm macro lens, although that converts to a somewhat crazy 180mm macro on a m4/3.
Amazon does have it in stock. I want to see it in-person before making a purchase and there isn't really any E-P1 discounting going on, so I might as well buy from a local shop.
It may sound silly, but AF assist using the flash is a huge pet peeve of mine - enough that there would have to be a lot of other motivating factors for me to buy one of the Oly DSLRs. The Lecia Digilux 3 would be an interesting option...if it cost half as much.
For the moment it's the 50mm that I'm looking at, which seems a bit more reasonable. Seems to be no problem to find on KEH, but scarce on the ground in Australia. Obviously Oly has the 35mm and 50mm Macro in 4/3 as well.
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