Olympus
showed their own prototype of a Micro Four-Thirds camera, made
even more compact by omitting any eye-level viewfinder. This emphasis on small body styles has led some to hail Micro Four-Thirds as the arrival of the “digital rangefinder”—i.e. very compact cameras with interchangeable lenses.
Photo: 1854, the blog of the British Journal of Photography
Even the ribbed lens of the Olympus prototype seems reminiscent of certain 1970s compact RFs, like the
much-loved Canonet QL17 GIII. (Note that the BJP article calls the prototype an “SLR,” which it is not: “R” stands for “reflex” viewing, precisely what Micro Four-Thirds models lack.)
But to me the most intriguing footnote to these announcements is buried in Panasonic’s future “
Lens Roadmap.” In 2009, allegedly they will introduce a non-zoom, 20mm f/1.7 lens in Micro Four-Thirds mount. If we translate that to its equivalent on 135 film, this would be a fast 40mm lens—actually, just like 1972’s Canonet!—with a “wide normal” coverage that I would personally love. And because of the reduced flange-to-sensor distance, its optical design might even be a simpler, well-corrected symmetrical design.
So will compact, fast, well-corrected normal lenses come to digital, at long last? At a price we can afford? This remains to be seen, though I’m cautiously hopeful. But for the moment, virtually any random 35mm SLR from the past, equipped with its humblest possible lens option, offers something that remains a rarity in the world of digital.