Tejasican
Well-known
What are the exact weight and equipment cost requirements for a"professional" photographer? Having serious RA I doubt that I could reach the weight ones ever, making me eternally unworthy, I guess, but I am curious.
Ming Thein, a working pro uses the OM-D extensively.
He is an excellent writer on photography in general, more than just another gearhead reviewer.
He recently wrote on the subject:
http://blog.mingthein.com/2013/08/24/the-demise-of-the-dslr/
Of course you could get lucky by finding clients that just want to pay
I'm starting to use this camera for professional work, mostly editorial and non-profit organizations who use the work online. Contemplating a M4/3 system for editorial travel assignments in the fall (in-flight magazine). So far I've had no disappointments from art directors or designers. Have you? What are the limitations of this system for pro work in your experience? Can it go all the way to architecture, large groups, weddings, anything else that may be double pages or large prints?
Most of the arguments against micro 4/3 are the same arguments that were used against 35mm cameras in the 1940s and 1950s. Back then it was the "unprofessional" Leica vs. the "professional" Speed Graphics and Rolleis.
I know an old pro photographer who just had major shoulder surgery--the result of carrying around heavy camera bags all his life. It is not "lazy" to want to avoid this.
The better APS-C cameras and the OM-D have reached a level of sufficiency for most work. If the smaller cameras can do the job, and they can withstand your working conditions, then why not use them?
Sports photographers will choose fast, reliable tracking autofocus and high ISO over megapixels. Landscape photographers who print big need more pixels, and they may prefer the richer tonality of medium format. But everything in life is a trade off. The smaller cameras get taken more places and don't leave you sore and tired after a day of shooting, so you get shots you'd miss otherwise. And frankly, I like the image quality I get from my micro 4/3 primes more than the equivalent Brand C and N.
I'm not sure that FF or medium format shooters are automatically more "serious." It may just be an artificial barrier to reduce the number of applicants. An Art Director might think that the person with the big cameras is more serious, but he may just have more money than brains, or he may have succumbed to the same groupthink as the A.D.
Here are 2 fashion photogs shooting with the E-M5:
http://www.43rumors.com/using-the-e-m5-for-fashion-by-andre-arthur/
http://www.43rumors.com/whitby-goth-weekender-damian-mcgillicuddy/
To me it is quite evident that what they are selling is their peculiar style, and that the E-M5 is flexible enough to convey it.
Another important factor IMHO is that lighting and good PP come before the camera. As you can see in the links above, use of speedlights or strobes literally creates the image long before the camera clicks.
I don't yet have a book as a street shooter, but m4/3 equipment has provided me a considerable increase in the number of flickr views, since I never feel that the camera comes between me and my subject. Thus it has led me to better *content*.
The trouble with the FF argument is that people make the camera come long before content, as if gear could replace photographic imagination. The E-M5 works in many cases (not necessarily all) because of its blazing responsiveness and flexibility, I find.
When you have an attitude (As above), that conveys that you (the person) behind the camera is the 1st most important element to capture a "Professional image". THEN, the camera is an extension of "your" creativity. Picking the right camera can also increase your success rate.
Of topic a little...
IF. N/C/P/S would make APS-C sensor and FF sensors would make sensors that have the resolution and DR (not # of MPs) as the high end m4/3 sensor MUST have along with high resolution lenses because of the smaller sensor. Then. the APS-C and FF sensors will be TONS better than they are now... In comparison of the size... IE: m4/3 specks vs APS-C specks.
Look, That's is why the high end m4/3 sensors are VERY CLOSE in IQ to these others (old tech) sensors... IF the larger sensor makers kept up with imaging tech, then theirs would be far ahead of the m4/3's all the time! Their not, and and gap is closing fast!
How many NEW larger sensors are really in these APS-C and FF cameras? Mostly, just internal firmware and a few tweaks here and there... and BAM, a "new, improved" sensor... Hay, Oly does it also... they all do... Buy, Oly has changed sensor makers... Sony now makes Oly sensors...
The E-M5 is a very able camera, as will be the new E-M1.
It still starts with the one behind the camera, and their knowledge on how to prepare and execute an idea to a "Professional" image.
Build up your Portfolio "First:, not your gear. (Use the gear you have, you'll be surprised how much you can do with it). If your worth your "grain of salt", then the camera is secondary, and you'll pick up what ever one will deliver for you.
It's not really only a matter of attitude, there are some objective factors.
The improvement in Sony's sensor technology was certainly a game changer. I still remeber when P. Potka was the first to discover that DR had increased by two stops over the earlier generation: what disbelief!
Sensitivity had also increased by two real stops, and per pixel density had increased because of a lower AA filter. Add to that the 5-axis IBIS which makes the E-M5 a Steadycam, ...