Olympus PEN-F, a passion.

Hi everyone,

What follows is probably going to sound more than a bit flowery and nostalgic but it’s true to my feelings. When Olympus released the PEN-F camera all I could do was look longingly and admiringly at pictures of it and marvel at its beautiful retro rangefinder looks. That’s all I could do as I certainly couldn’t afford to buy one. Years later I found one going second hand in mint condition at a price I absolutely couldn’t resist and so I took the plunge. It was a very long time since I was that excited to see any piece of photographic gear arrive on my doorstep.

This camera, more than any other camera I’ve owned in years, has served to reignite and fuel my passion for photography. One only has to look at it and hold it in one’s hand to get a buzz of excitement. Every time I use it I’m transported on a journey back and I’m seventeen again using my first Olympus 35mm film camera. Of course this is my very personal experience, not only does the camera look a thing of beauty it has everything and more that I require in a camera. If it wasn’t such a joy to use I’d put it in a display case where I could sit and look at it’s beautiful looks but that’s not what I bought it for. πŸ™‚

This camera is just made for anyone who shares my passion for classic styling with the obvious benefits of modern technology. I don’t know if we’ll ever see its likes again, this camera has achieved cult status in a relatively short period of time. No camera is perfect but it suits my needs and comes as close as I’ve ever experienced to the simplistic joy of taking photographs. There’s something indescribable about the feeling one gets when using it.

Kind regards

Leigh

New Work: “The Canal”, Chichester.

Hi everyone,

First new work of the new year,

Kind regards

Leigh

My stealthy sub Β£20 camera bag.

Hi everyone,

I was walking past one of those cheap shops in Bognor Regis when I spotted this small rucksack for Β£9.99 UK and I thought it would make a nice small lightweight bag. After I got it home my thoughts turned to wondering if I could adapt it to serve as an inconspicuous camera bag. I dug out a padded camera insert with a velcro fastening flap lid that I’ve had for years and it fits very nicely with some room to spare for a rolled up waterproof jacket or suchlike resting on top and my neoprene “tripod in a pencil case” fits in the mesh side drinks holder pocket. I bought a hi-vis Β£4.99 waterproof rucksack cover to fit it. So as I’m guessing that I probably spent about Β£5.00 on the insert so the total expenditure comes out at approximately Β£20.00. It’ll hold a camera and lens and one or two additional lenses and I can put a few bits and bobs such as my camera rain cover, filter pouch and spare battery/s in the front pocket. πŸ™‚ Most of all it just looks like what it is, a cheap rucksack. I’ve always liked adapting non camera bags to suit my purpose.

All the best,

Leigh

Luminar Neo

Hi,

For some considerable time now I’ve been using Skylum’s Luminar editing software in it’s various iterations. I created my own vintage film look preset and applied it to one of my works of Chichester Canal as well as the amazing Generase tool to get rid of people, rubbish bins, signage and anything else that I didn’t want in the shot. πŸ™‚

Best wishes,

Leigh

I bought a new lens, TTArtisan 23mm f/1.4.

Hi everyone,

I’ve been looking at this lens for some time now and finally decided to pull the trigger and purchase one for Β£83 UK with free delivery from the manufacturers in China, when it comes to such things it doesn’t get much cheaper than that πŸ™‚ . The lens is the manual focus TTArtisan 23mm f/1.4 which, as a 46mm full-frame equivalent, should fit in nicely with my favourite focal lengths. The lens gets pretty good reviews across the board as long as one is aware of it’s limitations and stopping down to f/5.6-f/8 would seem to be the accepted way of getting the best out of it but that’s probably true, to a greater or lesser extent, for a good many Micro Four Thirds lenses. I’m very much enjoying a retro “filmic-look” experience right now both in gear and in processing and I’m really liking using lenses with less than clinically sharp rendering and saturated colours as is the case with my other TTArtisan lenses. When I say that I’m enjoying the retro-look I think that I always enjoyed it even back in my film days when it was current and not “retro” and I shot with Fuji, Kodak and Ilford films on small, solidly-built, lightweight Olympus 35mm film cameras and lenses. πŸ™‚

I can happily live with such things as less than tack sharp edge-to edge/corner to corner sharpness, vignetting, slight barrel distortion, chroma etc. it doesn’t bother me in the slightest that’s what gives these kind of lenses character. πŸ™‚ The thing is that now, thanks to modern digital post processing one can correct for these sort of things as and if one wishes something that simply wasn’t possible back in the analogue days when it really was a case of what you got was largely what you lived with. I’m really looking forward to trying it on my all-time favourite digital camera my Olympus PEN-F, a modern classic in itself. I’ll post my experiences with the lens and some shots when I’ve been out and tried it. I think that it’ll make a nice compact manual-focus companion to one of my similar focal length auto focus lenses such as my Olympus M.Zuiko 17mm and 25mm f/1.8 or my Panasonic Lumix 20mm f/17,

Kind regards

Leigh

Revisiting manual focus lenses.

Hi all,

Just lately I’ve dug out my TTArtisans manual focussing lenses, my 17mm f/1.4 and my 35mm f/1.4. It’s been a long time since I only packed manual focus lenses. Whilst I fully appreciate the value of autofocus especially when it comes to ultra quickly nailing focus, there’s something about manual focusing. It hard to put into words exactly but it’s not a hinderance given my typically slow-paced landscape photographic interests where I’m not capturing fast action or have the need to zone-focus. Not only has it taken me right back to my film days but most importantly it has slowed me down and somehow concentrated my mind and involved me more in the shot. Of the two lenses I surprisingly prefer the longer focal length which equates to 70mm in full frame terms. They both have their quirks but this gives them some character, they’re not the “sharpest tools in the box” and, if edge-to-edge image quality is absolutely paramount, then “these aren’t the lenses you are looking for” πŸ™‚ but, for the price, they’re a lot of fun and a good buy. I decided to pair them with my old, largely redundant, Olympus E-PL5 camera in order to make things as compact and lightweight as possible. I’ve fitted step up rings and lens hoods to suit my preferred filter size of 58mm.

I call this my “Silver Machine” πŸ™‚ Olympus E-PL5 and TTArtisans 35mm f/1.4 lens.

Kind regards

Leigh

“Messin’ about on the Canal”

Hi everyone,

Happy New Year, a new work.

Best wishes,

Leigh

Away in a manger

Kind regards

Leigh

Winter hat: Highlander Mountain Hat.

Hi all,

About as low-tech as my posts go or is it?. As the old saying goes “if you want to get ahead get a hat” πŸ™‚ . A few years back just before Christmas I went down to the seafront in Bognor to take some shots and the wind straight off of the sea was relentless and absolutely icy cold, my camera might have been freeze-proof but I sure as heck wasn’t. Later that night I started to get a severe pain all down the left side of my face right from my temple to my jaw and neck and only round the clock co-codamol would take the edge off of it for a while and even eating was really painful. After a largely sleepless night, a late evening trip the following day, Christmas Eve, to the doctor’s told me that I had trigeminal neuralgia triggered by the cold wind. This lasted right into Christmas day when thankfully it started to ease and I was able to eat my Christmas dinner without so much pain.

So I though “never again if I can help it” and I’d try and find a lightweight, warm, windproof and waterproof winter hat that had ear flaps (which tuck inside when not required) and protected the back of one’s neck and would scrunch up and fit in a jacket pocket and my search led me to the Highlander Mountain Cap which has gotten 5 star reviews more or less across the board on every website that I looked at. It has shorter peak to the cap, good for my photography for not getting in the way when I’m taking portrait orientation shots and it doesn’t catch the wind and blow off in strong winds like a baseball cap is prone to do and the peak folds up with a press stud but that makes one look like a real div but in such things I have no shame. πŸ™‚ It’s not a fashion item but it would seem to be just the ticket for really cold/windy/rainy days. it also has a micro-fleece lining. I post these kinds of things because someone else might find them of benefit. I got mine on Amazon for a very good price, considerably cheaper than the Highlander website which I linked to for information purposes. I followed reviewers advise and bought a large size which fits perfectly.

Best wishes,

Leigh

More great service from OM Systems.

Hi everyone,

I like to call out good service when I get it. I lost the DR-40 dress up ring as it’s called from the front of my M.Zuiko 45mm f/1.8 lens which are rarer than hens teeth to find. After contacting OM Systems support they’ve been scouring their warehouses and have located one and are sending it to me free of charge. After sales support and service doesn’t get any better than this. I haven’t had call to contact them many times over the years but on each occasion that I’ve done so they’ve come up trumps. Thank you OM systems.

Kind regards

Leigh

PS. Not only that but they sent it FOC by next day overnight courier!.