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I'm surprised, taken aback, by such lively discussion over a camera brand I've never even seen nor held in my hands. The manager at our local pro camera store, says he's never seen one either. I read through the posts, over a couple of prior pages, about the relative amount of tax or tariff for
Japan, vs. Korea, etc.; how much it is in Australian dollars--none of which really determines if it is a nice camera, or not--then settled down to try to read what makes a Ricoh a good choice, and why anyone would want one. I had always assumed they were just a sort of budget model. Until I saw the numbers you guys are quoting: $3500, $2999; not budget numbers after all. I read through some comments, e.g. someone likes the RAW files, or the B&W conversions, but not the color (etc.)
So I look over all that, and wondered, "really, they would rather have that than a Leica X something, or a Fuji X100v? (or something-whatever). (without the opportunity to shoot with a Ricoh to see if I liked it.) So what's my point? I don't know, just surprised, an eye-opener, because they don't seem to be often talked about here. I wonder if I will ever buy one.
It's surprising that you're never really heard much about the Ricoh GR series. The current digital line had its roots in a fantastic series of film compacts from the 90s which were famously used by Daido Moriyama for many of his iconic black and white street images. The GR line has a sterling reputation as a street photography camera, a high quality compact which slides into a pocket and serves as what a photographer would use when the big guns are at home. People speak of the GRiv in the same breath as the Contax T3, Minolta TC1, etc.
The GR series was brought into the digital age in the 2000s with the GR Digital line, using a small sensor like every other compact of the time. They moved to aps-c in the early 2010s, and are the only remaining/continuing line of pocket size cameras with an aps-c sensor.
If you look through the parent subforum, the top pinned post is a gallery of GR photos.
Digital Compacts
rangefinderforum.com
I own a GRD III (small sensor) and an aps-c GR from the first generation, bought in the early 2010s. Hype for the first aps-c GR was off the charts when it was released. I used both of mine until they died, taking tens of thousands of images. They were the cameras I literally dreamed of when asleep, the camera I would reach for reflexively in a dream if I saw something interesting. That is how engaging they can be.
