Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Fuji XE-2 versus Olympus OM-D E-M1

This week I had an enquiry from a photographer considering moving from a Canon DSLR  to a lightweight mirror-less camera. She referred to it as a downgrade but there are some who would say it is as an upgrade.

The shift to high-end compacts has been surging for the last 18 months.  High end compacts are capable of producing images equal to or better than many DSLRs. More photographers are taking advantage of the physical advantages afforded by smaller, lighter cameras with superb optics, especially for travel and street photography.

'I am looking at an Olympus OM-D E-M1 or the Fuji X-E2' my enquirer wrote.


My reply: 'The Olympus is a neat little package. One of my pro colleagues owns one and loves it. It also shoot very rapidly. Its not on my recommended list, mainly because of the sensor size.


Pic 1: Fujifilm XE-1 18-55 lens 1/4000 @ f4 250ISO 37mm
In brief, the Olympus weighs almost twice as much as the X-E2 but its sensor is little more than half the size of the Fuji. That just doesn't make sense.  Olympus  hasn't worked out the fundamentals as well as Fuji. I'm not saying the Olympus is a bad camera. Its not. But if image quality and weight are two important issues Fuji is clearly in front.'

My enquirer wrote back asking what lens I'd recommend for the Fuji XE-2.

Pic 2: Crop approx 5% of original image

'I think the Fuji 18-55 is a great all round travel lens affording you wide angle through to short telephoto. Its very sharp.

I have the XE-1 and thats the lens I use. If you want to be very clever you can buy an adapter further down the track and fit the Fuji with Leica lenses. The lens comes with a lens hood. The only extras you should consider is a a UV filter (Hoya)  and a camera case (Lowepro).  The XE-2 is lightweight with beautiful balance in your hand and good ergonomics so it should be a pleasure to use.'

oOo

Take a look at the wide array of  UWA photography workshops and get straight camera advice right from the horse's mouth - click HERE.











Saturday, July 5, 2014

21 Tips for Street Photographers


'Please don't show me any more perfectly exposed, perfectly sharp, colour saturated photoshopped landscapes. Show me photographs of real people enjoying life and having fun.' 

  1. Dress down
  2. Avoid hunting in packs – alone or with 1 friend is best
  3. Use a small, quiet camera (eg Fujifilm X100S)
  4. Select a wide-angle, prime lens
  5. The ‘2 sec’ rule – camera ready to shoot in less than 2 secs
  6. Pre-set manual focus to 3m when zoning
  7. Look for an interesting background
  8. Check the lighting on people's clothes and faces
  9. Separate subject from background using colour, focus and tone
  10. Moving subjects – more space in front of subject
  11. Camouflage 101 - fix gaze beyond subject – use a ‘screen’
  12. Befriend your subject
  13. Smile lots
  14. Camouflage 102 - drink coffee, read the newspaper
  15. Street performances – buskers and crowds
  16. Major events – festivals and parades
  17. Avoid looking at LCD until you have left location
  18. Carry a pocket release (brief model release)
  19. Be working on a ‘project’ in order to answer ‘why’
  20. Vary camera height – from worm's to bird's eye view
  21. Use cine approach – establishing shot, medium, close-up, macro.

    Note: All images shot in Fremantle, WA using a Fuji X100
'I don't know where I'm going from here but I promise it won't be boring'
David Bowie

On the Move: Travel and Street Photography Workshop 15/16 November 2014

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Is the X100 the world's best small travel camera?



Depending on the destination and mode of travel I choose a different combination of cameras, lenses and accessories. A Nikon D700 with 70-400mm zoom may be right for shooting sand dunes in Siwa while the same camera with a 50mm f1.4 prime lens is ideal for aerial landscapes in Cappadoccia, Turkey.

However, the one travel camera I NEVER leave home without is the Fujifilm X100 (now superseded by the X100S). If you compare image quality to size and weight it probably ranks as the world's best small travel camera.

Here are five of my favourite photograhic travel locations:

X100: Brandenberg Gate: 1/1250@f2.8, 800ISO

1.     Terraced padi fields, Ubud, Bali
Just a  four hour flight from Australia, Bali has been a favourite holiday destination for Aussies for more than thirty years. Ubud is an hour's drive into the mountains where the air is cleaner and cooler. On the back roads between Ubud and Candi Desa the narrow roads wind between lush green padi fields which are best shot at sunset or sunrise.

2.     Boranup Forest, Margaret River, Western Australia
Ancient. towering Tuart trees, winding roads, quiet unsealed bush tracks make for idyllic forest landscapes. Here is one place where you have a chance of being the only person for miles. Tripods, overcast skies and maximum depth of field promise extraordinary forestscapes.  

3.     Sand dunes, Siwa, Great Sea of Sand, Egypt
Siwa is one of the most impressive dune locations in the world. Siwa is a small oasis on the edge of the Great Sea of Sand near the Libyan border. Its best to travel by 4WD into the dunes an hour before sunsrise and set-up. Tripods are essential and warm clothing recommended as it can be down to sub-zero temperatures.
The Bundestag, Berlin. Fuji X100 23mm fixed prime, 1/800s@f8, 1000ISO

4.     Aerial landscapes from hot air balloon, Cappadoccia, Turkey
The landforms and geomorphology of Cappadoccia are breathtaking and unique. The giant fairy chimneys are home to dwellings, boutique hotels as well as ancient hospitals and churches. This magnificent landscape is best viewed from a hot air balloon at sunrise. It is difficult not to get a stunning photograph. (Tip: Make sure you squeeze your body into one of the four corners of teh basket to ensure a 270 degree view).

5.     Architecture, Bundestag, Berlin, Germany
The Bundestag is the House of Parliament for the German Government. An impressive illustration of modern artistic architecture the building is home to an innovative sytem of rotating and cascading lenses which redirect light into the parliamentry chamber.
No visit to Berlin wouldn't be complete without a walk to the historic Brandenberg Gate which has become a symbol for a united Germany.

Check out my Travel and Street Photography workshop at UWA Extension.


Sunday, March 30, 2014

Fuji X100 - In my top ten cameras of all time

Cycle track Germany. 1/110 sec f8 400 ISO 
Virtually every single time I pick up my three year old Fuji X100 people comment and ask me:

'Do you like the camera?'
'But it doesn't zoom, does it? 
'Its so small'
'Its so quiet'
Can you still get film for that camera?'

Yes its small, whisper quiet and it doesn't zoom. And it doesn't need film! It ranks as one of the ten best cameras I've ever owned and used in fifty years of photography. Its size, capacity and performance make it the 'Kylie Minogue' of cameras.

The one factor that makes onlookers screw up their noses is the fact that the Fuji X100 does not have a zoom lens. More than that, the lens is fixed to the body. You CANNOT change lenses. You CANNOT zoom. 'Oh, what a disadvantage' you say. In fact, just the opposite. The fixed 23mm (35mm equivalent) wide-angle lens is as sharp as a surgeon's scalpel and gives the red dot camera a run for its money. By having a fixed lens rather than a zoom teaches a photographer to think. Yes, think. A practice that is rapidly vanishing from the modern photographer's skill regime.

Fujifilm X100. (Now superseded by the Fijifilm X100S)

The responsibility for framing is clearly thrown back on the photographer. Image size is now controlled by your distance to the subject. You may actually get a little exercise in moving closer to your subject. You may even get to talk to your subject.

1/2200 sec @ f8. 1250 ISO. Near Dresden Germany. 8 Oct 2011. 6.42pm
The one thing the Fuji X100 will never do is intimidate the person you are photographing. In fact, just the opposite. Men and women are intrigued by the styling and are attracted to being photographed by a camera so quiet and unobtrusive.

Last week I upgraded the firmware on my three year old X100 and its now running faster than ever. And its still as quiet as a Rolls Royce.

Check out Dale Neill's photography workshops at UWA Extension by clicking HERE.