Christmas at Gunwharf 4
Christmas at Gunwharf 3
CHristmas at Gunwharf 2
Christmas at GunwharfA few snaps from before Christmas:
Christmas at Gunwharf 4
Christmas at Gunwharf 3
CHristmas at Gunwharf 2
Christmas at Gunwharf
All with my X-T1 and 18-55mm.
Just got back from a walk down the beach and ever camera but one I saw was a Fuji x series! I couldn't believe it.
Yep, i did just that sold all my Sony gear and moved to XT2 and so far very happy.This is echoed with my local dealership taking in all kinds of DSLR systems including Sony A7 series stuff towards the XT-2.
Seems to have gone down well![]()
Yep, i did just that sold all my Sony gear and moved to XT2 and so far very happy.
Yep, i did just that sold all my Sony gear and moved to XT2 and so far very happy.
I'm sure you've made the right decision and you'll not be disappointed.
George.
Me too, just got my final G Masters to sell off then that's all my Sony gear gone.
Even better, looks like a normal silver x-t2 (?) and graphite X pro 2? Plus a graphite 23/2 wr![]()
Nice set of images Mr G Sir, with some good detail both in the shadows & highlights.
George.
IMHO, the Fuji glass is as good optically as anything out there comparing lens to lens and equivalent FL to FL.
George.
The link does differentiate as 'silver' XT2 and 'graphite' X-Pro 2, but the XT2 looks the same colour as my GSE XT1.Even better, looks like a normal silver x-t2 (?) and graphite X pro 2? Plus a graphite 23/2 wr![]()
Isn't that another way of saying the fuji lenses are the (perhaps equally) best there is and nothing can better them, when comparing lens of the same focal length.
So the fuji 50mm equivalent is optically just as good as the otus, for example.
The link does differentiate as 'silver' XT2 and 'graphite' X-Pro 2, but the XT2 looks the same colour as my GSE XT1.
The Otus is a 55mm lens, so there is no like for like equivalent![]()
Isn't that another way of saying the fuji lenses are the (perhaps equally) best there is and nothing can better them, when comparing lens of the same focal length.
So the fuji 50mm equivalent is optically just as good as the otus, for example.
DittoYep I agree. Love my GSE but would prefer normal silver.
Park_1 by ImageMaker, on FlickrNever really considered the 90mm for this type of shot but it just happened to be on the camera when I walked into the park with the intention of grabbing some portrait shots of my dog.
Park_1 by ImageMaker, on Flickr

I'm not sure I completely agree with this as I can tell a difference in sharpness across my lenses most of the time. But also as you say, some of the price is bokeh, micro contrast etc. The issue for me is you get to a point and you pay a hell of a lot more money for very little improvement.I would say only two things about top-quality lenses: very few photographers have the technique to make the differences between them signify anything in practice, and unless you need a specialised tool for a particular job, the differences rapidly blur into questions of taste - whether you like this or that kind of bokeh, whether you value saturation and micro-contrast over brute resolving power, etc. I think it's uncontroversial to say that in most situations, Fuji lenses are more than good enough for most photographers. If you have the chops to actually get the most out of a Leica 50mm, more power to you. For my part, I've been considering buying a C/Y or QBM 50mm Zeiss Planar 1.4, but I hesitate to do so, because I have a feeling that in the low light, high ISO situations where I currently use my SMC Pentax 1.4, they will actually be indistinguishable, particularly when combined with a focal reducer.
I'm not sure I completely agree with this as I can tell a difference in sharpness across my lenses most of the time. But also as you say, some of the price is bokeh, micro contrast etc. The issue for me is you get to a point and you pay a hell of a lot more money for very little improvement.
Possibly, although I'd be pretty sure I'd see a difference although maybe not say which is which, just which I find sharper. This won't be true for all lenses of course, but for example I can sure see a difference between my 70-200 and 24-120 at the same FL and aperture. Similarly I can see a difference between my 18-35mm and 24-120mm. I could see no discernible difference between my 24-120mm and 24-70mm f2.8 though in terms of sharpness.Is that not because you know which lens shot what though? Could you blind test tell the difference, same aperture, same subject, lighting etc
Just because you can't see or hear something doesn't mean others can't. I do agree some claims are a bit absurd, but then I've seen some pretty extreme things when it comes to the human body.I think the placebo effect in photography is more powerful than people realise, because we overestimate the objectivity of our perceptual systems. There are so many times I've been doing nothing in Photoshop because I picked black to be drawing on a mask instead of white, or v.v., but convinced myself I could see a subtle effect...There are people out there who are perfectly sure they can hear the difference between speaker cables of different thicknesses, which is manifestly absurd...but vision is not all that different from hearing.
This might seem odd, but agree with this too! Differences in focusing bedevil attempted comparisons between fast lenses.I've seen someone claim an image comparison of two lenses looked the same, one image wasn't even in focus properly. If they missed that, how could they even hope to find the subtleties..
People compare difference in lens bokeh all the time, whilst some people will just claim it's all the same.
No sensible discussion can be had.
Absolutely! But expectations are very important, either way. If you expect to see no difference, you'll often see no difference, even if there's one there.Just because you can't see or hear something doesn't mean others can't. I do agree some claims are a bit absurd, but then I've seen some pretty extreme things when it comes to the human body.
I've seen someone claim an image comparison of two lenses looked the same, one image wasn't even in focus properly. If they missed that, how could they even hope to find the subtleties..
People compare difference in lens bokeh all the time, whilst some people will just claim it's all the same.
No sensible discussion can be had.
One from this evening. I hear it's going to be foggy tomorrow, something that always makes me keen to grab a camera and head into Oxford!
Mist on Port Meadow by David Hallett, on Flickr
I would say only two things about top-quality lenses: very few photographers have the technique to make the differences between them signify anything in practice, and unless you need a specialised tool for a particular job, the differences rapidly blur into questions of taste - whether you like this or that kind of bokeh, whether you value saturation and micro-contrast over brute resolving power, etc. I think it's uncontroversial to say that in most situations, Fuji lenses are more than good enough for most photographers. If you have the chops to actually get the most out of a Leica 50mm, more power to you. For my part, I've been considering buying a C/Y or QBM 50mm Zeiss Planar 1.4, but I hesitate to do so, because I have a feeling that in the low light, high ISO situations where I currently use my SMC Pentax 1.4, they will actually be indistinguishable, particularly when combined with a focal reducer.