Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/05/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I bought a Panasonic G1 and M-4/3rds adapter last week and thought you would be interested in an initial user's report. Six of the photos I took with this combination can be found at: http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/rtaylor/PICKS/panasonic+G1/ or http://tinyurl.com/o7fnbg Since I expect to travel to Japan for the first time this summer, I wanted a small, lightweight, travel camera with a reasonable sensor size and capable of producing really nice results. I think I've found it. Some initial impressions: * The EVF works fine for manually focussing and framing in dim light and bright without invoking the magnified view down to about f4.0. Smaller than that I needed to magnify the view. Since (I read) it runs at 60 Hz in bright light the finder has no more delay than a typical DSLR and with the usual anticipation I found I could catch the peak of the action pretty reliably. I dim light (and at very small apertures) it slows to 15 Hz and I quickly learned to slide the camera slight to the right and use my left eye to catch the action. This works really well and is better, IMO, than putting an optical finder on the top of the camera. * It quickly became apparent that a couple of firmware changes would be nice to have: - One-button selection of the magnified view (it now takes two) - An option to have a magnified spot in the center of the field with an option to have it on all the time. * On my camera, anyway, the front dial exposure compensation function in Aperture Exposure mode cannot be turned off. This led to some heavy confusion until I realized what was happening. This does not happen in Programmed Exposure mode and once I switched to it my exposures became consistent. If anyone knows of a menu setting change I could make to fix this, please let me know. * The indoor shots were taken at ISO 400 (1st shot) and 800 (latter two) in a very dark French restaurant. It sure looks to me that ISO 800 is nicely usable. The outdoor shots were at ISO 200. The posted pictures were shot in RAW, converted to DNG and processed in Lightroom with only exposure (to fix the exposure compensation errors noted above). They all look a little pastel for my taste and I will probably boost both contrast and saturation in my workflow on output from this camera. I didn't try higher than 800. (The food was too good and I got distracted.) * All these were taken with the 28 Summicron except the Nobska photo which was taken with the new rangefinder focussing Cosina 15 mm. * The few photos I took with the 14-45 kit lens look pretty nice, too, but I hardly spent any time with it and can't really comment beyond that. That's it for now. More later, I expect. Regards, Dick off-list comments to r.s.taylor at comcast dot net please.