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Posts Tagged ‘Olympus’

16 September, 2013 – Olympus OM-D E-M1 Field Report from Paris

16 Sep

Micro Four Thirds is heating up. Panasonic’s GX7 has a lot of people excited, but last week Olympus announced the OM-D E-M1, its latest flagship camera.

I have received a review sample, just prior to my leaving for a week-long vacation in Paris, France. The E-M1 will therefore be the subject of a daily blog here on this site. Check in every day for updates.

"Having been to Antarctica with Michael and Kevin, I would say after having traveled the world and shot nearly my entire life as an exhibiting photographer,  it was one of my highlights in my life and I talk about it, all the time.  The images and experience of seeing something visionary and nearly extinct from the world, to see and experience the wildlife and scenery that does not fear humans is amazing.  The images I shot there won me two Smithsonian awards and nearly 18 other international awards". – Tim Wolcott

 Find Out More Now
These Expeditions Will Sell Out Quickly. They Always Do


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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Apple adds support for Olympus E-P5 in latest Raw compatibility update

13 Sep

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Apple has released version 4.09 of their Raw Compatibility software for Aperture and iPhoto ’11. This update adds support for the Olympus PEN E-P5, and also restores lens correction to the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100. There’s an additional fix related to white balance for images from Nikon cameras that have been edited in third party software.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus OM-D E-M1 – Review extended with more AF insights

13 Sep

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We’ve had more time to shoot with the Olympus E-M1 and have extended our coverage of its AF performance. In addition to incorporating real-world Continuous Autofocus examples and commentary, we’ve also spent more time shooting with it alongside an E-5, to see exactly how the two compare, and amended our impressions accordingly.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus introduces 12-40mm F2.8 ‘Pro’ zoom for Micro Four Thirds

10 Sep

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Olympus has unveiled a high-end standard zoom to match the E-M1: the M.Zuiko Digital ED 12-40mm F2.8 PRO. It offers a 24-80mm equivalent range and is dust, splash and, freezeproof, and uses a manual focus clutch design similar to the 12mm F2 and 17mm F2.8 primes. Olympus has also announced the development of a matching 40-150mm F2.8 telezoom, which is scheduled for release next year. Click through for more details. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus blends E-M5 and E-5 to create OM-D E-M1 flagship ILC

10 Sep

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Olympus has announced the OM-D E-M1, now the flagship of its Micro Four Thirds lineup. Rather than calling it the follow-up to the E-M5, Olympus says that the E-M1 is actually the ‘successor’ to the E-5, the Four Thirds camera introduced back in 2010. The E-M1’s standout feature is its new 16.3MP Live MOS sensor with on-chip phase-detection autofocus, designed to work with legacy Four Thirds lenses. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus O-MD E-M1: First Impressions Review

10 Sep

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The O-MD E-M1 has just been announced and takes its place as both Olympus’ flagship Micro Four Thirds camera and the successor to the E-5 DSLR. We’ve been spending some time with a production unit, taking the new 16.3 megapixel Live MOS sensor for a spin in a variety of conditions. Follow the link to learn more about this high-end mirrorless interchangeable lens camera.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus PEN E-P5 Review

05 Sep

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The Olympus PEN E-P5 sure took some getting. Following a briefing by Olympus it was two months before I actually got my sticky fingers on one in the review-atorium. And even then I had to fight, persuade and jollify every Olympus contact I had. It seems every man, beast and journalist wanted a P5.

So, what’s so special?

I know it has nothing to do with photography and camera technology, but this little number sure pulls the heart strings in the retro stakes.

Coinciding with the 50th anniversary of the legendary PEN F film camera, the PEN E-P5 is a digital update of a classic that offers much in digital capture. Its all metal cased body shrieks of Olympus classic — and even a touch of Leica!
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The review camera was supplied with the f2.0/12mm, f1.8/45mm and the f1.8/17mm lenses.

Olympus PEN E-P5 Features

Pretty stunning specs:

  • 16.05 million effective pixels
  • Live View CMOS.
  • Mechanical shutter runs from 60 seconds to 1/8000 second; Time and Bulb exposures.
  • Time lapse shooting of stills or movies. Set a time interval between 1 second to 24 hours, setting how many shots the camera will capture in a series (1-99).
  • Built-in Wi-Fi.
  • 5-Axis Image stabilisation.
  • Focus peaking emphasises the contours at the point of focus in white or black.
  • LCD screen can be tilted to face upwards at an 80 degree angle and downwards at a 50 degree angle.

The maximum image size is 4608×3456 pixels, enough to make a 39x29cm print.

Video can be shot in MPEG4 format, up to Full HD 1920×1080 resolution. If you shoot stills in the middle of a video recording, the latter stops.

The stabiliser works remarkably in video shooting but you have to watch focus; a tap on the shutter button and AF comes to heel!

Handling: the camera is nicely balanced in the hand, thanks to a moderate sized speed grip at the right edge. Whilst you could operate the P5 one-handed, it feels better with two.

Pocketability: camera body will fit into one pocket; a lens or two should fit into another.

Controls: pop up flash is to the left, with its switch just beneath; external flash and accessory shoe mid deck.
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The mode dial has positions for auto and PASM; movie settings; the novel photo story setting.
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Then there are 23 scene modes, including landscape, children, macro, fish eye etc; here are also found 12 Art Filters: Pop Art, Light Tone, Diorama etc.

Photo story: in this fun mode you can shoot multiple shots, then combine them into a single image. Over this you can add handwritten text.

Still on the top deck: the shutter button; on/off lever; and a function button.

On the leading and rear edges are found two dials: when rolled, the for’ard, sub dial can adjust such matters as ISO setting and exposure compensation; the rear, main dial is used to adjust aperture value or white balance.

Put another way: when shooting manually, moving the dial at the front of the camera adjusts the aperture while the back dial affects exposure time. At rear, the dial changes the ISO value and white balance.
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Rear: video record button; a two position lever (see below); menu; info; four way jog dial offering access to exposure compensation, flash options, burst shooting and self timer, AF area positioning.

Lower down are found the replay and erase buttons.

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Narrabeen lake 4 Dramatic tone.JPG

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The big deal with the P5 is the ease in which it can be linked with a smart device, such as an iPad or smart phone. You can synchronise the screens of the smart device and the E-P5 so you can mirror the camera’s LCD view on the smart device, then control it by touching the smart device display as if it were your camera. Great for self-portraits and for remotely shooting dangerous subjects like wildlife that may be startled or even turn on you! You can even use your smart device to embed GPS info into your shots.

There is no turret finder on the P5, but you can acquire an optional hi def VF-4 viewfinder, with an impressive 1.48X magnification, a high res 2.36 million dot LCD.

Olympus PEN E-P5 ISO Tests

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Olympus Pen E-P5 ISO 400.JPG

Olympus Pen E-P5 ISO 800.JPG

Olympus Pen E-P5 ISO 1600.JPG

Olympus Pen E-P5 ISO 3200.JPG

Olympus Pen E-P5 ISO 6400.JPG

Olympus Pen E-P5 ISO 12800.JPG

Olympus Pen E-P5 ISO 25600.JPG
Only by ISO 3200 was noise becoming an issue. At ISO 6400 still looking good and sharp. At ISO 12800 noise was up but still useable IMHO. At ISO 25600 noise well up but, for certain subjects, useable.

Olympus PEN E-P5 Review Verdict

Quality: above average
Why you’d buy the P5: plenty of control.
Why you wouldn’t: too good for run-of-the-mill snap-shooting!

I liked the P5 but felt some of the controls unnecessary: like the two control dials.

Olympus PEN E-P5 Specifications

Image Sensor: 16.05 million effective pixels.
Metering: Multi pattern, centre-weighted averaging, spot.
Effective Sensor Size: 17.3×13.0mm (22.5mm diagonal) Live MOS.
Lens Mount: Micro Four Thirds.
35 SLR Lens Factor: 2x.
Shutter Speed: 60 sec to 1/8000 second, Time, Bulb. Internal/external flash sync: 1/320/250 sec.
Continuous Shooting: 9 fps.
Memory: SD/SDHC/SDXC cards and Eye-Fi.
Image Sizes (pixels): 4608×3456 to 640×480. Movies: 1920×1080, 1280×720, 640×480.
LCD Screen: 7.6cm LCD (1,037,000 pixels).
File Formats: JPEG, RAW, JPEG+RAW, MPEG4.
Colour Space: sRGB, Adobe RGB.
ISO Sensitivity: Auto, 200 to 25600.
Interface: USB 2.0, HDMI mini, AV, accessories.
Power: Rechargeable lithium ion battery, DC input.
Dimensions: 122.3×68.9×37.2 WHDmm.
Weight: 420 g (inc battery and card).
Prices: Get a price on the Olympus E-P5 (body only) or Olympus E-P5 17mm with a f1.8 and VF.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Olympus PEN E-P5 Review


Digital Photography School

 
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Olympus fraud saga rumbles on with UK prosecution

04 Sep

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Olympus will be prosecuted by the UK Serious Fraud Office over charges that it provided ‘misleading, false or deceptive’ material in accounts submitted by its medical supplies subsidiary Gyrus Group Limited. Earlier this year three former senior executives of the company were handed suspended jail sentences for their part in a massive accounting scandal which hid huge investment losses dating back to the 1990s, and was uncovered by former CEO Michael Woodford. A statement issued by Olympus states that the potential impact of the prosecution on the Group’s business is unclear, as it’s difficult to estimate the level of any fines which may be imposed if the prosecution is successful.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Did Sigma design the Olympus M.Zuiko 75mm F1.8?

29 Aug

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It’s an open secret that many compact cameras are produced by OEMs – companies that produce large numbers of products that are then sold under other brand names. There are also consumer-grade zooms from big name manufacturers that look much alike (we know for a fact that third-party makers commonly create lenses for the bigger brands). But we were still surprised to read about Sigma’s latest patent for a 75mm F1.8 prime lens…

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus stems loses but PEN sales disappoint

10 Aug

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Olympus has announced reduction in its camera business’s loses but PEN sales have fallen behind expectations. The predominantly medical company said PEN sales had fallen 12% in the first quarter, but that it expected the year’s income from mirrorless models to be consistent with last year’s figure of ¥9bn ($ 90m). The company blamed the fall on its delay in releasing the E-P5 and said the camera business is on track to break even this financial year.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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