
OM System goes for the retro photographer with a digital reincarnation of the OM-3.
You only have until 25th March! Last year’s Tell Your Story Program was a big success. It’s an initiative designed to help OM System discover and support new talent. Those lucky enough to be selected are provided with their own OM System OM-5 kit, plus the personal mentorship of a nominated OM System Ambassador. You…
Is this OM System’s most misunderstood lens? There is a lot of nonsense flying around about OM System’s new ULTRA-telephoto zoom lens. And there are also some honest concerns. Indeed, my own feelings about the 150-600 have changed the more I have thought about this lens. So let’s delve in. Perusing comments on our very…
A little old and affordable friend has returned; the m.Zuiko ED 9-18mm f/4-5.6 ultra wide angle zoom, now in Mark II guise. One of Olympus’ earlier Micro Four Thirds lenses, launched back in 2010, the m.Zuiko 9-18mm (18-36mm in full frame field of view) is a marvel in compactness and light weight. Its design is…
If a 400mm super telephoto (800mm in full frame terms) isn’t enough, OM System now has a solution; the new ultra tele m.Zuiko ED 150-600mm f/5-6.3 IS. That’s a 300-1200mm field of view if you are shooting full frame. And you can use MC-14 1.4x and MC-20 2x teleconverters, if you wish. With the MC-20, that…
Gone is the familiar Olympus branding, but this is still the OM-1, the OM System OM-1, Mark II. Headline points: Minimal external design changes apart from grippier rubberised adjustment wheels Unchanged sensor and Imaging Engine (TruePic X), but buffer RAM has been doubled Significant Continuous AF reliability improvements through revised algorithms AI-powered human person detection…
It’s been a ghost on Olympus, and, subsequently, OM System lens roadmap charts for several years, but now it’s a reality, the OM System m.Zuiko ED Digital 90mm f/3.5 IS Pro 2:1 macro lens. OM System m.Zuiko ED Digital 90mm f/3.5 IS Pro macro lens with STF-8 twin-flash Aimed at macro photography in the field…
It’s very easy for photographers who are invested in relatively large sensor camera platforms to dismiss the smaller sensor Micro Four Thirds system. You might think it’s even easier now that the big hitters, Nikon and Canon, have finally retired their DSLR strategies, following Sony’s move a few years back. Without the need for space…