By-tor
Well-known
Love my Leica M10 & Voigtlander 28/2 Ultron II setup...
Yes, a M body with 28 is awesome. Mine would be the M9 with Elmarit 28 asph or Biogon 28. In fact, I was out with the M9 and Elmarit 28 a week or two ago, just cruising around on my way to get my hair cut. The colours and sharpness are otherworldly.Love my Leica M10 & Voigtlander 28/2 Ultron II setup...
Those ones are not small or light either. Nor they will do much special on the street. Those are just generic cameras (except old Fuji which looks good, but not for everyone and it just as bulky as else. Personally, I was never impressed by its OVF optics.)1. fuji xpro 2 18mm
2. nikon z5 28mm 2.8
3. canon r8 28mm 2.8
4. sony a3 28mm 2
...To me size is important cause if the camera weights a lot i wont take it with me...Which one would you suggest ?
My preference is a three prime kit - 28, 50 & a longer lens. Which depends on the system but has been an 85(Kiev), 90(Leica), 105(Nikon) & 135(M42).I‘m surprised to see so much love for the 28mm focal length here. I met (online and in real life) a lot of people who didn’t like 28mm and 135mm lenses with the argument that they are easy to design. Who cares? I like the perspective of 28mm on full frame, it’s almost a natural wide angle, 24mm seems to be pretty wide.
Maybe you haven't met the right 35. 😆 I never truly enjoyed 35mm until I got the Zeiss Distagon 35, and two years later, I still can barely take it off my M9. Prior to that, my most used focal lengths were 28 and 50, and I used my Biogon 25 all the time until the dreaded Zeiss wobble claimed it.My preference is a three prime kit - 28, 50 & a longer lens. Which depends on the system but has been an 85(Kiev), 90(Leica), 105(Nikon) & 135(M42).
I find it harder to use a 35 than any other focal length - it's neither fish or fowl to me. Not quite a wide and not quite a normal. Hence a 28 turned into my usual wide angle lens once I discovered it.
Some of my greatest fun has been with the Ricoh GRD III with Voigtlander 28/25 compact VF, which I've also used to satisfying effect with the Sigma DP1. The experience was like a film camera, with a bright viewfinder, noisy operation and gorgeous files. The original aps-c GR was also fantastic with the Voigtlander VF, too.The real digital tool for me on the street are Ricoh GRD series. Not GR, but GRD. Small, CCD sensors. It was made to be joy, not typical a typical tool. Yet it has all of real camera settings, plus you will never miss focus with snapshot focus mode. All is in focus all the time 🙂
I was also in fear not to have OVF on it. But with GRD I realized what OVF is often the limit.
I was also skeptical of GR/GRD been MiC. But they are build with real metal. Even Fuji doesn't give this feel, IMO.
I still regret not getting one of those. They are so hard to come by now, and Nikon discontinued them many years ago.Nikon Coolpîx A with OVF.
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The 14mm f2.5 is a really excellent lens, provided you get a good one - most all of them are good. A few of the older ones were decentered, including the one I got years ago with a used GF3. I had the chance to use another, somewhat newer one recently and it was fantastic. I consider the 14mm and a GX85 to be a killer combo, from looks and ergonomics through to results. 16MP sensors are limited, but the one in the GX85 is one of the very best for output.There’s a Panasonic 14/2.5 lens that’s very small and good quality optics. There’s also the DG Summilux Leica 15/1.7 that I also have and it’s great but pricier.
As for micro-4/3 bodies get a used LUMIX G5-G7 for cheap, the lower the model number the smaller the body. I think the G5 is only slightly bigger than the Ricoh GRiii minus the lens. Olympus make or made good M4/3 cameras, find a used Pen.
I looove my GX85, and will probably get a spare when one appears for a good price. I'm also considering a GX9 for the 20mp sensor, like the one in the G9. I highly recommend the metal grip from JJC for the GX85/GX9, it makes the camera handle much better.The 14mm f2.5 is a really excellent lens, provided you get a good one - most all of them are good. A few of the older ones were decentered, including the one I got years ago with a used GF3. I had the chance to use another, somewhat newer one recently and it was fantastic. I consider the 14mm and a GX85 to be a killer combo, from looks and ergonomics through to results. 16MP sensors are limited, but the one in the GX85 is one of the very best for output.
I don't quite agree on the G7, as it's the older Panasonic shutter which is more prone to shutter shock, doesn't have IBIS, and doesn't have the better color science which Panasonic implemented with the GX85. The G85 is the next model and is like a GX85 internally with a G7 external. It's a great option.