Rick Waldroup
Well-known
It is kind of strange how we are now discussing vintage digital cameras, isn't it? 😎
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It is kind of strange how we are now discussing vintage digital cameras, isn't it? 😎
@agentlossing The GX85 is enjoying a fair bit of online popularity as a travel/street camera, Fuji X100 alternative, what have you. There are a number of YouTube videos about it in this capacity, starting with Spencer Whiteman's videos some years ago, and as recently as this week by others. I'm hoping to pick up another GX85 or a GX9 at some stage because I love mine so much.I am surprised the GX85's price has stayed very flat. Early on the pandemic I ended picking up a body and three batteries for 200 dollars that I use for photos/videos of my sister's kid's sports they participate in.
@agentlossing The GX85 is enjoying a fair bit of online popularity as a travel/street camera, Fuji X100 alternative, what have you. There are a number of YouTube videos about it in this capacity, starting with Spencer Whiteman's videos some years ago, and as recently as this week by others. I'm hoping to pick up another GX85 or a GX9 at some stage because I love mine so much.
And here's a recent GF1 video so we stay on topic!
It's a positive sign, maybe. Demand may actually influence the release of more small system cameras. Micro 4/3 cameras have gotten too large.I'm stunned. A year ago, someone gave me a GX7, and I checked the price online once I got home. $150 seemed to be the going rate. They're now close to $400. Camera prices have gotten absolutely bonkers, even for older, less desirable stuff.
@agentlossing The GX85 is enjoying a fair bit of online popularity as a travel/street camera, Fuji X100 alternative, what have you. There are a number of YouTube videos about it in this capacity, starting with Spencer Whiteman's videos some years ago, and as recently as this week by others. I'm hoping to pick up another GX85 or a GX9 at some stage because I love mine so much.
And here's a recent GF1 video so we stay on topic!
Canon have begun to release new compact cameras, albeit for vloggers and 'content creators', so maybe there's hope for a return to small m43 bodies. Sony are continuing to miniaturize full frame, so there seems to be a trend back to small footprint. m43 has the edge in small lenses - we just need sensors equal in dynamic range and image quality to the full frame sensors of ten years ago, we'd be laughing.I really hope so, but we've had a few good years of compact camera sales increasing, used prices through the roof and constant sell-outs of the G7X and GR III, with no movement by the camera makers. It reminds me of how car makers left the small truck segment to Toyota and claim there was no demand...and then all at once, we had a flood of small trucks from the Hyundai Santa Cruz to the Ford Ranger and Maverick.
Those were the days! People were adapting their M mount glass to the Panasonic G1 and GH1 and noting that it was the first time rangefinder glass could be used with a digital camera. So cool 😎It deserves respect! The first few generations of MFT cameras were not only really fun to use, but also the first practical way to use a lot of vintage glass on a digital body. While I'd been happily using M42, Rollei QBM, and Exacta SLR lenses with my Canon 10D, the new ability to punch in on a magnified live-view for focusing was a revelation for my nearsighted self. Plus I could finally adapt my dad's old Leica glass!
Wow, you were an early adopter! And with a blue model at that.I had a blue Lumix G1 back in the day since I was accustomed to Canon DSLRs and preferred the internal EVF. I still regularly use the Lumix 20mm/f1.7 and 14mm/f2.5 that I bought with it.
That's the issue now, because people on YouTube are pumping up these now-vintage digital cameras and driving prices back up. I should have got a spare GX85 when one was available a few years ago at my local. They hardly turn up secondhand now.When I wanted a smaller pocketable model I veered off the Olympus side of the MFT ecosystem, mostly because the Pen series had IBIS for use with vintage lenses. I've always wanted to play with a GX1 or a GF1, though, and almost got one before the prices started to creep back up out of the impulse-buy range.