“Textures”

Hi,

Kind regards

Leigh

Soapbox: “What a load of old cobblers!”

Hi everyone,

If there’s one thing above all else that irritates me about so many lens reviews it’s the absolute obsession with sharpness. I’ve never owned a modern lens that isn’t, at the very least, acceptably sharp. All those test charts and lens comparisons ad-nauseum. What self-respecting modern day lens manufacturer would try and market a lens that isn’t sharp?. In the pre-digital analogue days we never even thought about such things, we used what we had. The internet didn’t exist and neither did another of my pet peeves “pixel-peeping”. How about all those great photographs taken with analogue equipment?. I wonder what the modern day reviewers would make of the lenses that I and others were using fifty or so years ago?. By comparison with their modern day equivalents, on the whole, they definitely weren’t as sharp, It seems to me that some folks are really hung up on the pursuit of the sharpest of sharp lenses. As a matter of personal taste I spend more time softening my images than sharpening them. πŸ™‚

Of late I’ve been reacquainting myself with my Olympus M.Zuiko 14-150mm II “superzoom” lens, a great lens for travel. I bought this lens seven years ago just prior to my visit to Rome where I used it for the first time. Since then I’ve used it off and on and never been unhappy with the results obtainable from this lens. Given my photographic interests and preferred method of working, if I had thousands of pounds to spend on Pro-branded lenses would I do so?. The short answer is no, the longer answer is no, because not only are they considerable bigger and heavier, I don’t believe the difference in optical quality is such that comes close to warranting their hefty price tag. The 14-150mm is weather-sealed, small, light and so well suited as a travel lens. I trust this lens to produce good quality images. Pair this up with a small lightweight fast prime lens like my 20mm Lumix f/1.7 another great lens and when travelling I’ve got all I need for 99.9% of subjects and occasions and I’m neither straining my back nor my finances.

Here’s a nice real-world review of the 14-150mm lens.

Kind regards

Leigh

One last pier shot

Hi everyone,

Palace Pier, Brighton.

All the best,

Leigh

Three more from Brighton

Hi everyone,

A few more from my visit to Brighton.

“Attack of the giant shellfish”

“Cross my palm with silver”

“Still there!”

After 9 years since I took the shot below.

Kind regards,

Leigh

Huts – Brighton

Hi,

Last one for today πŸ™‚

Best wishes,

Leigh

“Splendour” – Brighton

Hi everyone,

Another of my shots from today’s visit to Brighton taken with my M.Zuiko 14-150mm lens.

Best wishes,

Leigh

Superzoom in Brighton

Hi everyone,

“The End”. Amusements at the end of Palace Pier, Brighton. EM-5 II and M.Zuiko 14-150mm. I forgot how good this lens is. Β Five frame handheld HDR.

Kind regards

Leigh

Funny

If you want a laugh view on YouTube and turn on CC (closed captions) for this video πŸ™‚πŸ™‚

πŸ™‚ Leigh

Adding a rubber lens hood to my M.Zuiko 12-45mm Pro lens.

Fully Retracted

Fully extended

Hi,

I’ve had a couple of these screw on 58mm fit three-stage collapsible rubber lens hoods laying around for ages, so long in fact that I can’t remember what I bought them for. πŸ™‚ I thought I’d try one with my M.Zuiko 12-45mm zoom lens. The advantages over the proprietary lens hood for me are two-fold. First it enables me to easily rotate the attached slim-fit CPL filter with a hood attached and secondly it works very well in conjunction with my camera rain cover which has an elasticated fitting at the lens end. I tested and, importantly, when fully collapsed, it doesn’t vignette at the wide angle end of the zoom range. Purely to save space in my bag whilst travelling I’ve left my Olympus hood attached in the reversed position at least temporarily, to act as a backup hood should I get any issues with the rubber hood. It won’t last forever but, at about Β£3-4 UK it’s cheap to replace when I need to and I already have a spare. I’ve tested it out on a couple of recent outings and it works well.

I paid about Β£17 UK new for this rain cover on Ebay a few years back. They’re made by a UK company that also make all sorts of rain covers for baby buggies etc.. So I thought they’d know more than a bit about keeping things dry and if they can keep someone’s baby dry from the rain then they can keep my “baby” dry πŸ™‚ and it does so. It’s turned out to be the best I ever used, very quick to fit with an elasticated front end which stretches over the hood to fit and can’t slip off and a draw string at the camera body end. Roomy enough to take my longest lenses and very easy to turn a zoom ring through the fabric, sometimes the simplest things work the best. Having a weather-sealed camera and lens isn’t reason enough to get it soaking wet if one has the means to keep it dry. I regard camera weather-sealing a secondary line of defence against water ingress and not a primary one.

By-the-way the camera half-case, stylish as it is, isn’t there purely for cosmetic reasons. It adds a bit more grip and protection to the camera and, having had a broken latch on the hinged battery access cover in the past before I replaced it, the flap with side fastening popper holds the battery snuggly in place should it ever fail again. Lastly, the base of the camera has a push-fit rubber cover which covers the contacts for the optional grip when not fitted. Although not overly prone to doing so it cannot fall off and get lost with the half-case fitted.

Kind regards

Leigh

Dual battery and multi memory card box.

Hi everyone,

These look interesting, I’ve ordered one up to try out, hopefully should fit my batteries and hold 5 SDHC cards. Time will tell but the clips and hinges look a bit sturdier than the ones I’m using. You can’t see in the picture but, underneath the two batteries there are foam pads. I suppose that one could also use one of those adapters from micro SD to normal size SD card and thus increase the card storage by another nine if one so desired!. I don’t have an immediate use for the two flip-up compartments but, knowing me, I’ll probably find one. πŸ™‚

Kind regards

Leigh