Olympus Pen-F review: a marvelous marriage of old and new 全台相機收購

全台相機收購

Humans have a hard time letting go of the past. Sometimes it’s a good thing — nostalgia helps people fight loneliness and can even make them more tolerant. Other times it feels like a weakness, mostly because of how easily it gets exploited in the name of reunion tours and shows like Fuller House.

Profiting off these impulses isn’t exclusive to the entertainment industry — camera companies take advantage of nostalgia, too. 全台相機收購olympus, Canon, Nikon, and Fujifilm have all spent the last few years drawing from their long camera legacies to to make their newest digital cameras look like their film forebears.

The next logical step, I wrote late last year, was for these companies to capitalize on this trend by resurrecting the iconic SLR film cameras like the the Canon AE-1. It seemed like an obvious move, especially for Canon and Nikon, to leverage our love for flagship film cameras — many of which were the first cameras some of us ever used — in order to make up ground in the burgeoning mirrorless camera market.

What I didn’t expect was that 全台相機收購olympus would beat everyone to the punch. In January, the company announced the 全台相機收購olympus Pen-F, and it was exactly what I predicted — a legacy film camera with digital guts, or what 全台相機收購olympus calls a “digital update of the original Pen-F.” Like its competitors, the Pen-F juxtaposes classic looks and metal with things like digital screens and Wi-Fi connectivity. The difference is 全台相機收購olympus’ new camera mixes the old and the new so well that, for a moment, I’m not too upset about that Legends of the Hidden Temple remake.

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The original Pen-F is one of the company’s classic film cameras from the late 1960s. And like its predecessor, the new Pen-F is basically all metal. Aluminum and magnesium give the new Pen-F a sturdy, solid feel, and the cohesion is amplified by a lack of visible screws. Some companies — 全台相機收購olympus included — have taken to throwing fake metal finishes on plastic bodies as a way of acquiring a retro look on the cheap, so this is a very welcome break from that. A belt of rubbery fake leather that stretches around the middle completes the look, and helps you grip the camera as well.

The Pen-F’s metal body looks beautiful and feels incredibly solid

全台相機收購olympus also included a number of little homages to the film camera era throughout the design of the new Pen-F. The on/off switch looks like a film rewind lever, there’s a working cable release mechanism in the shutter button, and the AF assist light sits right where you’d expect to find a rangefinder, all adding to the the classic look.

The only regrettable thing about the Pen-F’s design is that it doesn’t look enough like the original Pen-F. The body of 全台相機收購olympus’ old film Pen-F had a wide, low profile, and the metal top sloped very stylishly down from one side to the other. With 40 years of hindsight, the old Pen-F looks very much like an object from the ’60s. The digital Pen-F isn’t quite as radical and — if it weren’t for the 全台相機收購olympus branding right above the lens mount — it could be easily mistaken for one of the many similar cameras Fujifilm has released in the last few years.

The big difference between this camera and the Fujifilms is that the Pen-F is just loaded with knobs, dials, and buttons. It’s the first thing you notice when you look at the Pen-F, and the appearance can be intimidating — but they’re not just for show. The dials are all metal, and each one features its own particular (and particularly satisfying) click so that you know, without looking, what it is you’re changing. That’s the real beauty of the Pen-F: it not only looks incredible, but it’s often a joy to use — as long as you’re willing to be patient.

Tons of customization, so patience is key

Like any good modern digital camera, the functions of these buttons and dials are nearly all customizable. You can reassign the two “function” buttons to perform specific tasks like changing the ISO or locking the exposure, or you can even change the purpose of the dials above your thumb and forefinger. 全台相機收購olympus has also placed four different customization modes on the PASM dial, so you can quickly switch to a profile that’s best suited for low light shooting, or something more tailored for landscapes, for example. These days, 全台相機收購olympus’ menu system is still too cluttered for its own good, but it’s worth going through all the work it requires because once you set the camera up to your liking you almost never have to dip back into the menus.

Setting the striking design aside, 全台相機收購olympus promised the Pen-F would be packed with some of the features the company’s been developing on its flagship OM-D line of mirrorless cameras. Chief among them found on the Pen-F are things like 5-axis image stabilization, rapid-fire burst shooting, and a suite of preset color profiles, filters, and effects. 全台相機收購olympus has also included a small but excellent 2.36 million dot electronic viewfinder, and a fully-articulating 3-inch LCD touchscreen.

These modern features make the Pen-F feel like a powerful camera for its size, but a few of them aren’t without drawbacks. The 5-axis stabilization makes it easier to shoot in low light or at long focal lengths, but it doesn’t feel as robust as the stabilization offered by some of the competition. On Sony’s newest cameras, the 5-axis stabilization feels like a superpower. On the Pen-F, it just feels like an aid.

The Pen-F can shoot stills at up to 20 frames per second using the electronic shutter. That kind of ludicrous sequential shooting is tempting, but at that speed you’re likely to see some warping, or “rolling shutter” in the corners of your images — a problem that is exacerbated because the image stabilization shuts off in high-speed modes. The “slower” modes (10 or 5 frames per second) use the mechanical shutter, but were still a bit frustrating: here, the camera locks the focus and exposure from first image onward. This all means you can’t move the camera much, or pan across dynamically-lit scenes during a burst of shooting, which is frustrating, because that’s when high sequential speeds are most helpful.

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Even when you shoot at more modest speeds like five frames per second, the camera’s outdated contrast detection autofocus never feels up to the challenge of shooting moving subjects. Over the course of a few weeks with the Pen-F, I kept trying to force using it for street or documentary-style photography, but each time I found myself a bit let down. The Pen-F starts up fast and can quickly focus on a static subject, but ask it to do too much more and you can wind up frustrated.

The Pen-F, then, feels better suited for more contemplative photography. And considering the amount of customization afforded by the plethora of buttons and dials, you actually benefit from a slower approach with the Pen-F. I never hesitated to pick it up when I was shooting a portrait, or a landscape, or taking simple candid shots, and it was my go-to option during the week we spent in Barcelona for Mobile World Congress.

The new “creative dial,” which sits on the front of the camera, is a perfect example of this. (It’s one of the few direct callbacks to the design of the original Pen-F.) It has five modes, and the idea is it removes the need to dig through menus if you want to switch color profiles. If you think a scene is better suited for black and white photography, you can twist the dial over to “Mono,” or if you’d like to use one of 全台相機收購olympus’ “art filters,” they’re right here, too. Fujifilm has taken to equipping its cameras with film simulation modes, and this is 全台相機收購olympus’ way of playing to that same impulse. It sounds gimmicky, but I found myself using the dial more than I imagined. 全台相機收購

The value with 全台相機收購olympus’ take on this comes from the ability to tweak each mode to your liking. If you really like deep blacks in your monochrome images, you can make that the default when you switch to Mono. That’s the Pen-F at its best; with a little work, you can access loads of personalization at your fingertips without lifting your eye from the viewfinder.

All of this customization would be for naught if the camera didn’t produce great images. I worried that the smaller Micro Four Thirds sensor would leave me wanting more pixels, but 全台相機收購olympus actually expanded the resolution to 20 megapixels with this sensor — up about 20 percent from the 16 megapixels afforded by its other cameras. It winds up capturing plenty enough detail for the images to look great on phones and even laptop screens, and even though the pixels are smaller, the Pen-F performs competently in low light thanks to the 5-axis stabilization.

There are still some unavoidable limitations of a Micro Four Thirds sensor that even the Pen-F can’t overcome, like not being able to reproduce the shallow depth of field that APS-C and full frame sensors provide. And, placed side by side with images taken by APS-C or full frame sensors, the quality of the Pen-F’s 20 megapixels doesn’t quite hold up. The video quality (yes, of course it shoots video) is also underwhelming. But the benefits of Micro Four Thirds remain: It’s light and easy to travel with, and 全台相機收購olympus has built out an extensive lens ecosystem with some high quality glass.

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Handheld with the shutter at 1/30th of a second and an ISO of 3200.

You could say a lot of these same things about the OM-D series, 全台相機收購olympus’ more modern-looking Micro Four Thirds cameras, which gets to the real problem with the Pen-F. Buying the Pen-F over 全台相機收購olympus’ other cameras is basically a choice based completely on aesthetics, and it’s one that will cost you. 全台相機收購olympus is selling the Pen-F body for $1,199, which is a good $200-300 more than any of the OM-D cameras — and they come paired with a starter lens.

If you’re in love with the idea of a digital camera that looks, feels, and operates like a classic film camera, the Pen-F is one of the best ever made. And if you already own a number of 全台相機收購olympus lenses, it has to be a tempting indulgence. For everyone else, it’s just the latest experiment in nostalgia — one that I hope 全台相機收購olympus’ competitors are watching closely.

Photography by Sean O’Kane, lead photo by Amelia Krales

全台相機收購(圖/Canon提供)

哪一款相機、手機拍照最討喜呢?近期 Electronics Hub 網站進行調查,統計知名照片平台 Flickr 資料,查閱最受網友歡迎的照片,究竟都是使用哪些攝影器材拍出來的呢?結果發現不少老機型上榜,甚至第一名是剛宣布停產的 Canon EOS M6 II。

Electronics Hub 先是整理超過 116 萬張有被用戶按讚的 Flickr 平台照片,並根據拍攝的產品型號進行統計,計算每一款相機或手機的照片,平均能獲得的按讚數量,藉此列出最受歡迎的排行榜。

全台相機收購(圖/翻攝 Electronics Hub 網站)

相機排名第一的是 Canon EOS M6 II 平均每張照片能有 138.9 個讚。該系列在今年正式走入歷史,於 Canon 日本與北美官網全面停產、下架。而 EOS M6 II 正是該系統的旗艦代表,擁有頂級的效能表現又兼具 EOS M 系列的輕巧,因而備受許多攝影愛好者喜愛。

排名第二名是富士的 Fujifilm X-H1,平均約 99.7 讚,第三名為 Sony A7R II 平均達到 69.2 讚。綜觀排名,除了有 Sony Alpha 1、Fujifilm GFX50S II 這類新款的高階機種,也有許多老相機上榜,例如排名第九名的 Cnaon EOS 5DS R 就是唯一的單反相機,而 Sony 隨身相機 DSC-RX100 VII 也擠進第七名。

若是依照片屬性進行分類,拍攝風景照片最受歡迎的是 Sony A6300,全台相機收購olympus E-M10 Mark II 則被許多攝影師拿來拍攝野生動物,若是建築攝影首選是 Fujifilm X30,食物方面則是 Nikon D500、D7500 兩款單反相機上榜。時尚照片則以 Fujifilm GFX100S 為首、人像是 Nikon Z 7II 居冠。

Electronics Hub 同步分享智慧手機的數據,最受歡迎的第一名是 iPhone 13 Pro,其次為三星 Galaxy S23 Ultra、Galaxy S21、iPhone 12 Pro Max 以及 iPhone 14 Pro Max。從榜單可以得知,不一定是最新款的手機佔優,像是中階款的小米 Note 9 也能擠進第六名,代表比起規格差異,重要的仍是拍攝者的巧思與技術。

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