The one thing I am clear about is that I love taking pictures, I love seeing the world around me and I love looking at it through a lens. And I always, always have a camera with me.
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Fuji X100s 2.0s @f4, ISO 500 ~ Bell Town in Seattle, Washington photographed through a hotel room window |
So when the camera manufactures began producing the micro four thirds lines and the mirror-less lines I got excited about the possibilities and didn't hesitate. I jumped right in. I started out with the very first Panasonic micro four thirds right after it came out and graduated over the next couple of years, through a variety of other cameras, to the Olympus OMD EM5, which I still have and like very much (especially with the Olympus 45/1.8 lens attached). But even with the fine EM5 I found myself carting around a bag and lenses, albeit small ones, and that still just wasn't what I was looking for. Simpler, easier, more convenient, great IQ and no bag of lenses, that's what I wanted.
In 1969 when I first got interested in photography SLR's were just coming into their own and rangefinder style cameras were on the way out, more or less. I shot with a Canon Canonet QL17 with a fixed 40mm f1.7 lens. It was with that camera that I learned to see the world around me with photographic eyes. No zooms, no interchangeable lenses.
In 1969 when I first got interested in photography SLR's were just coming into their own and rangefinder style cameras were on the way out, more or less. I shot with a Canon Canonet QL17 with a fixed 40mm f1.7 lens. It was with that camera that I learned to see the world around me with photographic eyes. No zooms, no interchangeable lenses.
So it's been a long journey to end up right where I started with almost identical cameras and fewer choices to make that get in between me and what I want to photograph and I've never been happier. A happy snapshooter grabbing shots of the stuff I see around me everyday, everywhere. And, maybe, some of the best news is what my wife said; "You don't look like a photographer, you just look like a tourist". Yes! I love being a tourist.
Here are a few more shots: One from a day trip up to Port Townsend, Washington a couple of days ago with my good friend Mark for lunch and few snapshots. The other from last weekend in Seattle, Washington to see Bruce Cockburn.
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Electric Port Townsend, Washington This bicycle is electrically operated and the gentlemen with the gracious smile having lunch is the owner. Fuji X100s 1/125s @f5.6 ISO 200 |
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Bruce Cockburn at Neptune Theater in Seattle, Washington. I didn't have good seats so this is cropped way tight to get this NO flash shot. Fuji X100s 1/30s @f4 ISO 500 |
Tom
What a great perspective on photography and gear.
ReplyDeleteIt seems you and I have similar paths in photography.
Thanks for sharing.
Reed
My Blog: DMC-365.blogspot.com
Thank you Reed. I've been reading your DMC-365 blog for a while now and always enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteAmazing the similarities in the QL17 and the new X100s. I know you put a lot of thought into this camera and think you made a solid discussion. It compliments your style in a number of ways.
ReplyDeleteTom great post. I have been looking at the Fuji X100S and know that I will get one soon. I had the same thoughts as you as my first 35mm camera was the Canon Canonet 28 and then the QL17. I loved those cameras. Thanks for the post.
ReplyDeleteNice to see another x100 user who likes Bruce Cockburn! :-) Love your B & Ws. What settings/mode was the camera on and what did your process them with? I assume they are not SOC jpegs.
ReplyDeleteHello and thanks for reading. I've been following Bruce Cockburn since the 70's, a great artist. Thanks for the nice words on my B&W's too. I shoot Raw+Fine and as you know the Fuji line of cameras are very capable of producing usable images soc. But there are always those times when we just need a little more "head-room" to make critical adjustments so Raw is usually how I shoot and frequently the Raw files are the ones I end up editing. I think I have all the camera settings showing below each photo with the only information missing being that they were all shot in Aperture mode, Raw+fine and all my editing was done in Lightroom 5.
DeleteThanks again for the note.
Tom