Bill Pierce
Well-known
Compared to the cameras that most of us use, the Fuji GRX is a relatively big and relatively slow handling camera. While it’s going to do a great job on architectural, landscape and studio work, it’ s probably not going to see a lot of use at football games. And yet, it has a strange fascination for us gear heads because the relatively thin, mirrorless body can accept adapters for a variety of lenses from medium format cameras, but also 35mm film and full frame digital cameras. In many cases the image on the 43.8mm x 32.9mm sensor are going to be soft at the edges. In some shots that’s acceptable. In others you will crop the image, but still have a larger usable frame than the standard 35mm size.
Obviously, these adapted lenses are going to have to be manually focused. Hooray!!! I see folks autofocusing on every shot, center autofocus, reframe, shoot, refocus. This really isn’t necessary with trees and buildings and, a lot of times, people, but it is the kind of distraction that can make you miss a shot. There are even times when manual focus is more dependable. The convenient Live View focusing of mirrorless digitals using the sensor itself for focus eliminates the problems wide open, high speed lenses have dealing with the difference between ground glass and sensor to lens distance in DSLRs or lens cams that are at the edge of their tolerances in rangefinder cameras. I have 3 Zeiss Otus lenses for Nikon. They are exceptional wide open and from frame edge to frame edge. But, as mentioned, they have focusing problems on the Nikon. If Santa brings me a GFX, I hope he brings me a Nikon to Fuji adapter. Then a Leica to Fuji adapter. And then....
I know it’s strange to view a relatively new camera in terms of old lenses. Your thoughts?
Obviously, these adapted lenses are going to have to be manually focused. Hooray!!! I see folks autofocusing on every shot, center autofocus, reframe, shoot, refocus. This really isn’t necessary with trees and buildings and, a lot of times, people, but it is the kind of distraction that can make you miss a shot. There are even times when manual focus is more dependable. The convenient Live View focusing of mirrorless digitals using the sensor itself for focus eliminates the problems wide open, high speed lenses have dealing with the difference between ground glass and sensor to lens distance in DSLRs or lens cams that are at the edge of their tolerances in rangefinder cameras. I have 3 Zeiss Otus lenses for Nikon. They are exceptional wide open and from frame edge to frame edge. But, as mentioned, they have focusing problems on the Nikon. If Santa brings me a GFX, I hope he brings me a Nikon to Fuji adapter. Then a Leica to Fuji adapter. And then....
I know it’s strange to view a relatively new camera in terms of old lenses. Your thoughts?