Igor.Burshteyn
Well-known
Everything zuiko - I started quite a conventionally with minolta 800si - good camera, but I don't want to touch it anymore after feeling of om4ti. Actually after I got om1 I almost stopped using minolta. Too many features in order to use them all, too large in order to take it everywhere. OMs are much smaller and genuine intuitive in usage. Image quality is comparable - and I compare to good MAF glass, like 50mm prime, tamron 90mm macro and 28-135 mm f4-4.5.
Trius
Waiting on Maitani
Igor: I am very happy for you. Well, I'm envious of some of the Zuiko glass you have, especially that 50/2 macro. Man, I really want one of those!
I am shooting nearly all Zuiko/Kodak film tomorrow. The only non-Oly equipment I will use is a Mamiya 1000 DTL with some Russian and East German glass.
I am shooting nearly all Zuiko/Kodak film tomorrow. The only non-Oly equipment I will use is a Mamiya 1000 DTL with some Russian and East German glass.
BillBingham2
Registered User
Don't get me started on therapy, I talked with my Mother today and while I love her, there is not enough time or money! I lived in on El Mar, south west corner of Mt Read and Latta Rd. Paddy Hill School. Went to Arcadia HS and of course MCC.
Long to introduce my sons (or at least the older one) to a gut-bomb and as Mommy-dearist has moved out to Colorado, no reason not to visit. Never spent a lot of time in the FL, but the few trips were magic. NY is a great state, even when you add NYC into it. Lived there for 9 years in the 80s. Lots of camera stores there to cause serious GAS.
If I only had a clue in HS or college, I would have gotten a few Nikon SPs.......
B2 (;->
Long to introduce my sons (or at least the older one) to a gut-bomb and as Mommy-dearist has moved out to Colorado, no reason not to visit. Never spent a lot of time in the FL, but the few trips were magic. NY is a great state, even when you add NYC into it. Lived there for 9 years in the 80s. Lots of camera stores there to cause serious GAS.
If I only had a clue in HS or college, I would have gotten a few Nikon SPs.......
B2 (;->
Igor.Burshteyn
Well-known
Trius, don't envy - I got 50mm f3.5, not f2 
Jeremy Z
Well-known
Oddly enough, it seems that OM SLRs are at least as popular on RFF as the Olympus rangefinders.
This may not be the case if Olympus had jumped on the interchangeable lens RF bandwagon.
Once the SLRs were out, Olympus considered rangefinders to be a commoner's camera; not to be taken as seriously as the SLRs. Prior to the release of the OM system, their RFs were a little more high-end. (SP, for example)
I like my little Olympus RC; haven't seen pix from it yet, but I don't expect it to be quite on part with the OM1n. However, it is pocketable.
This may not be the case if Olympus had jumped on the interchangeable lens RF bandwagon.
Once the SLRs were out, Olympus considered rangefinders to be a commoner's camera; not to be taken as seriously as the SLRs. Prior to the release of the OM system, their RFs were a little more high-end. (SP, for example)
I like my little Olympus RC; haven't seen pix from it yet, but I don't expect it to be quite on part with the OM1n. However, it is pocketable.
Trius
Waiting on Maitani
BB2: If you make it to the area, be sure to let me know ... if I'm still here, of course.
My wife grew up on Rumson Rd., went to Cardinal Mooney.
Igor: Well that's a great lens, too. A friend of mine had one, and used it regularly as his standard lens.
Jeremy: You're right, but that was the case with nearly every camera manufacturer that made the move to SLR. You may be surprised by the RC. If exposure is right, the sharpness will please you.
Igor: Well that's a great lens, too. A friend of mine had one, and used it regularly as his standard lens.
Jeremy: You're right, but that was the case with nearly every camera manufacturer that made the move to SLR. You may be surprised by the RC. If exposure is right, the sharpness will please you.
Jeremy Z
Well-known
Oh, I nearly forgot.
Forgive my "hitting for the other side", but OMs are way too versatile to be honorary rangefinders. ^_^
They're not as quiet, not as thin, and not as easy to hand-hold at slower shutter speeds, but other than that, they leave RFs in the dust.
Forgive my "hitting for the other side", but OMs are way too versatile to be honorary rangefinders. ^_^
They're not as quiet, not as thin, and not as easy to hand-hold at slower shutter speeds, but other than that, they leave RFs in the dust.
Igor.Burshteyn
Well-known
OM against the RF world - I was looking desperately for RF in price level of OM1/50mm normal (~100$) whch would compare in image quality to OM combo. I didn't succeed to get even close - even oly 35SP with its highly regarded lens is far behind (though low light perfromance is superior to any slr). Nothing beats OMs for price/performance and versatility - I got OM4ti/16mm fisheye/18mm(ugly)/28mm/50mm macro for less than M body alone would cost.
decoyslikecurve
Member
Make a subsection!
Make a subsection!
Another vote here for an OM sub-section. I love my OM2n and I'm going nto buy a black OM1 when I get the chance.
I only have a 50 1.8 but I would like a 35, 34 and around 75-90
any more example pics from simular lenses?
Make a subsection!
Another vote here for an OM sub-section. I love my OM2n and I'm going nto buy a black OM1 when I get the chance.
I only have a 50 1.8 but I would like a 35, 34 and around 75-90
any more example pics from simular lenses?
nightfly
Well-known
Which version of an OM1 should I be looking for? I want a black one, that's pretty much it. Won't ever use a flash or anything other than basic metering. I've never used a motor drive but maybe.
Archie
shooting mathematican
I just came back from shooting an opera. Had my om4 with me (with 50 1.8 as I don't have another lense yet) and I had a few glances through the viewfinder to try some spot meter stuff. Well the problem is, that you can't see the readings, when the stage is nearly dark. Is there any solution for this? (Thought about some LED mounted via Hot-Shoe in front of the small window which captures the light for the readings.)
Jeremy Z
Well-known
Archie said:Well the problem is, that you can't see the readings, when the stage is nearly dark. Is there any solution for this?
Do you have a manual for your OM4? If not, get one somehow.
For the mighty OM4, this is an easy situation. Either take multiple spot readings of your subjects and average them, (I think it does this automatically, when you take more than one spot reading) or take a highlight or shadow reading and let the light meter figure it out.
I haven't had my OM 4 for about 8 years, so the details may not be 100% accurate, but I believe if you press the 'shadow' button, it takes a spot reading at that time, and tells the camera's meter to bias this as a dark area. It adjust the exposure accordingly, automatically.
skipwilliams
Newbie
Use the finder light?
Use the finder light?
OM4's have a viewfinder light. If you look on the side of the lens mount, just above the self timer, there is a button that, when pressed, illuminates the meter reading scale below the viewfinder.
Skip
Use the finder light?
OM4's have a viewfinder light. If you look on the side of the lens mount, just above the self timer, there is a button that, when pressed, illuminates the meter reading scale below the viewfinder.
Skip
oftheherd
Veteran
Igor.Burshteyn said:forgot that OM 16mm fisheye. For me it's more gimmick than real tool. Anybody has examp[les of creative usage of fisheye?
The 18mm will lend itself to photographs of your hand with something behind it that appears to be actually in the hand. I once did a photo of my wife with my hand close to the lens, and her standing back a ways from the lens, but looking like she was standing in my hand. You may have to try several times to get just what you want, or use something to steady your hand, but it is cute. Not an original idea either, I saw it somewhere, in a magazine as I recall.
My 18mm is a Spriratone in screw mount for my Yashica TL Super and my Fujica ST 901. I think the Fujica beat the OM1 out in smallness (I mean first. I don't remember how they compare size wise), and their lenses were very sharp, but just never got the credit they deserved. That was partly because of marketing I guess, and the fact they were screw mount rather than the "pro" bayonet mount lenses. To me the big advantage of the ST 901 was that it was AP auto-exposure as well as compact. I still love that camera and the Fuji lenses (50 1.4, 28 3.5, 135 3.5 and 50 3.5 macro) are still sharp.
That is not to take away from the OM1. The first ones I saw I liked. Nobody I knew in Korea at the time who had one wanted to get rid of it. Even I had a minor GAS attack but just couldn't afford another series/system of camera.
Archie
shooting mathematican
oh thanks skip, I always thought this button was for unmounting (was wondering why two buttons have to be pressed). ok time to get a manual.
oscroft
Veteran
I'd go for an OM1n - the improvements over the OM1 are not great, but it will be a newer camera (possibly by quite a few years).Which version of an OM1 should I be looking for?
scottgee1
RF renegade
Trius said:Steamer: I agree, it's an honorary RF. Maitani was a big Leica fan, and that was in his mind when designing the OM system. For my next foray into stygian darkness photography, I'm going to shoot with an OM-1n, 21/2, Leitz 21mm finder and mirror locked up, scale focus, at slow speeds. As close to RF with an SLR as I can get.
Trius, you beat me to the 'history lesson'.
As for your available darkness work, I'd suggest a beanbag draped over the camera and lens. I'm a member of the "Zuikoholics Anonymous" list and we've found that aperture release can add a bit of vibration that can be reduced with a beanbag. OM4 and later models have aperture pre-release.
BTW, if any of you-all are interested in joining the OM list, here's the URL:
http://www.zuikoholic.com
We cover OM of course, but a lot of the regulars use a lot of gear and have a wide range of interests so those get discussed as well.
FWIW, I got into Olympus after starting a thread here at RFF that asked the question, "Which SLR is most like an RF?" We had a good time and learned a lot. I ended up getting a small OM kit and really like it.
Have fun!/ScottGee1
Trius
Waiting on Maitani
Scott: I used to belong to the OM list (as did GeneW and maybe some others here), but I unsubscribed nearly 2 years ago. The volume of posts was SO high, and a lot of it was OT at the time. I still email AGSchnozz and some others from time to time, especially if I need some information that I can't find in the eSIF.
As for the beanbag technique, which was a subject when I was subscribed, I'll be shooting in a pub and moving around, so that really wouldn't work. Thanks though.
Earl
As for the beanbag technique, which was a subject when I was subscribed, I'll be shooting in a pub and moving around, so that really wouldn't work. Thanks though.
Earl
Archie
shooting mathematican
Yeah I also subscribed to the list a while ago, but there were really too much posts, so I unsubscribed soon. It would be great if the whole thing would run in a forum like this. Or why do they still use the mailing list method?
scottgee1
RF renegade
Archie said:Yeah I also subscribed to the list a while ago, but there were really too much posts, so I unsubscribed soon. It would be great if the whole thing would run in a forum like this. Or why do they still use the mailing list method?
The subject comes up periodically and the group invariably votes to retain the mailing list rather than create a forum. May be less expensive and certainly less work for the owner as well.
FWIW/ScottGee1
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