Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/02/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]My photography interests are pretty varied so I'm maintaining a complete Leica M9/M240 digital system, a Canon 5Dmk3 system, and a Micro 4/3 system with the Olympus OMD EM-1. We do a lot of diving and my wife insists on a full-frame system so she uses the 5Dmk3s, but I think she is slowly succumbing to the siren call of Micro 4/3 because it is getting increasingly difficult to tell the difference between our results underwater, not to mention that the many usability advantages of the EM-1 often make it easier to get the shot at all. It's no wonder they are currently outselling DLSRs by 6 to 1 for this application. I can choose to either use my EM-1 or our 2nd 5DMK3 body underwater, yet I choose the M4/3 simply because of usability, which is a huge asset in that environment. Quality is already good enough with the EM-5 and even better with the EM-1. Frankly, people are incredulous about the results we are getting with M4/3 underwater these days and many are rethinking whether the better IQ of full frame is really worth the incredible hassle and expense of getting it to some of the more remote diving destinations. I'm trying to do more landscapes these days, especially infrared landscapes. So when I have the luxury of working out of a car, and weight doesn't matter, I have started to use the 5dMK3 system again. In fact, I just added the 17mm and 24mm TS-E lenses to our kit for just this purpose. Also, we are preparing to do some landscape astrophotography and the Canon is simply the best tool for the job. With the advent of the Leica M240, the M system finally becomes truly viable for landscape work. The EVF means I can frame accurately and position things like grads properly. The R to M adapter makes it possible to use telephotos and focus them accurately. Unfortunately, it doesn't looks like it will ever be a suitable tool for landscape astro because none of the M wide angles (24 and wider) are well-corrected enough for coma to work well. The point of all this is horses for courses. If I'm on a dive trip, I'm shooting M4/3 both above and below the water. If it's nighttime landscapes, or landscapes where I can accommodate the weight and bulk, it's the Canon. If I were going on a long trip during which I was doing a lot of walking during the day and wanted the finest IQ, I'd go for the M240. If it is a long through-hike like 800km on the Camino de Santiago, which is a mix of candids, landscapes in all sorts of light in in all sorts of weather conditions, I'm taking an EM-5 or EM-1. And for everything else, general shooting around home, I'm usually grabbing the EM-1 just because of all the cameras I have at my disposal, none are as flexible, easy to use or as fun to use as the OMD EM-1. This argument that people have about full-frame vs APS-C vs M4/3 is ridiculous because each of those systems has its place. Of the three, APS-C probably makes the least sense IMO, because it occupies this nether world in which the smaller sensor doesn't bring any corresponding reductions in weight or bulk - the worst of both worlds.