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switching to the Fuji X: leave the DSLR world behind

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tzSantos

Hello Patrick! Ive been following FR for quite a while, allways collecting great info from you and other readers. Thanks for sharing all the insights and all the effort you put into it! I want to share with you my switch to fuji´s  X-system you can find it here (translated version)

I moved to Fuji!!! Now What?!! life still runs….

In the last couple of years my clients and their demands have changed, so has my course deeper into the food, product and interior photography but something else, deep inside really needed an ouverhaul and that was my aproach and concept of photography.

In the last year we´ve been assisting to a war between the major brands about megapixels and ISO Performance…disregarding the users, and they´re demands. So Fuji comes up with the X100…. something new and refreshing hited the market. i started do get curious, but the single lens wasnt a fit for my comissioned jobs.  Then the Xpro 1 and  X-E1 came along those were my answered prayers!!

I borrowed a x100, and tok it to a job, I LOVED IT!!! it was a Judo Masterclass and several keynote presentations… totalizing a 6h reportage, I delivered mainly x100 images to my clients. and my big heavy DSLR stood in the bag most of the time.

The game was on! The lightness, inconspicuousness, high quality files, Stunning high ISO performance, packed with a fun and challenging camera, gave me the final push into the X-System cameras.

within two months i sold all my pro Nikon Gear, and bought a Fuji X-E1 + 18-55. It was a deep dive but i had the help of Antonio Homem Cardoso the portuguese X-photographer and also the Royal family personal shooter. He drove me throught the process and cleared some doubts that only users could answer.

3 days after getting my hands on the X-E1, I had a reportage job in agenda, i didnt want to make any mistake so i borrowed a D600 + 24-70, I just couldnt risk fighting with the new system while in reportage and loose the pictures that were happening in front of me. That didnt happened!! and the images were Stunning…  all done with the X-E1!!

I cant say everything is now perfect and amazing, there are still a few issues and quirks but they all keep this camera charming, and it really makes me slow down and think throuh my settings and framing….. in the end…. I really found what i was missing in DSLRs… the fun and pleasure of creating images, for the pure pleasure of creating something mine and personal.

tzSantos

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Fred

Dear Patrick,
I’m a long-time follower and fan of Fujirumours who has just upgraded from X100 to X100s. Like many of your contributors, I too used to pack a 12kg backpack full of a D800, 4-5 primes, flashes, blah, blah.. But in 3 years my photography hadn’t progressed. I was paralysed by choice and becoming obsessed with pixel- and lens-porn. Every time I had the urge to go and shoot, I looked at the backpack and thought, “Nah… too hard, maybe tomorrow”.

Then I saw the light and sold the lot. Sure, I lost money- lots, actually. But I’m happier and never going back to dSLR-land. I usually shoot people, not things, and never people doing sport- so the X100s is my ideal camera. I’m still on a steep learning curve, but I know my skills have improved because I’m a) now taking the camera out with me, and b) actually thinking about the shot, instead of which lens would be better for the shot.

Shooting at 35mm is perfect for what I do, but I will be buying the [shoplink 12893 ebay]WCL[/shoplink] as soon as I can afford to- Saigon has some VERY tight spaces to shoot in.
I have Tumblr blog if you think it’s suitable to share on the forum. It’s not just photos, but some writing on my life as an independent researcher in VN. I’d refer you to the Ha Tien wedding posts for the best X100s shots (last weekend was my first play with it). There is other more confronting stuff there, all shot with the X100. Please feel free to let me know your thoughts. There are some brief explanatory notes with the posts.

I’m not going to begin to review this over-reviewed camera again here (I’m so not qualified, anyways!). But here’s what I think about it compared to the X100 after week one:

AF– single shot, yes it’s much better- certainly not dSLR-quick, but more than quick enough to catch street action 95% of the time in Vietnam. The X100 had a 30% suck rate on this.
AF-cont- not tried it yet
MF– I like the peaking, but yes, red would be a better colour choice. The faux split screen thing?- Meh! it’s a gimmick.

Handling tweaks- again, improved, but still nearly deleted a whole card’s worth of images by accident- that cheap crappy plastic scrollwheel really belongs on a $120 camera, not something worth $1300- lift your game here, Fuji.

High ISO noise? There is none in the range that normal people want to take pictures. For pixel-peeping wankers, doubtless they’ll find noise.

Image quality– This is where I think there is more than an incremental improvement. I was especially looking for improved range in the skin tones. The 14bit depth has made that difference- and it’s dramatic in my opinion.
There’s a tonal quality that comes through in the B&W conversions, too. For taking pictures of Vietnamese faces, this camera is just unbeatable. My girlfriend’s sister’s skin looks beautiful at her wedding.

In addition, kiboshing the LPF, and cranking the pixel count have both of course contributed to sharper images with more resolved detail.

I was interested to see that the SOOC jpeg (ProNegNormal- default everything), seemed a little bluer/less red than the RAW files I’d converted using the default Fujifilm X100s settings in CaptureOne.

My love affair with the X100s has just begun. I have a photoessay project to embark on over the next few weeks. I will use the X100s for this and send you a link once it’s ready.
Here’s the blog link for now.

http://gunzzel.tumblr.com/

Thank you for keeping my excitement alive for the past few months whilst I’ve been saving for the X100s upgrade. I browsed ‘rumors’ at least 5 times a day, and will continue to do so for inspiration. Keep up the wonderful work, Patrick!

best regards,
gunzzel (Fred Abery)

Fred

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Brad

Here’s my blog post and pictures about trying out the X100s on a vacation. I’m not a full time professional photographer, and the pictures are your basic family vacation type shots, but they might be interesting to see for folks like me.

“Even though I was having to figure this camera out on the fly, I really enjoyed shooting with it.  I loved its size (so much smaller than my DSLR rig).  And I loved the pictures that were coming out of it (even those that weren’t in perfect focus). I did find that, at times, I missed not having a zoom lens […].  Honestly though, I didn’t miss lugging around extra equipment. Having just the, comparatively, small camera hanging off my shoulder was freeing. […] Fuji X100s was the perfect (for me) size camera for my family vacation.

Now the sad part.  I sold the X100s right after we got home.  I promised my wife I wouldn’t keep it, so I put it on Craigslist and it sold immediately. Then… I starting missing it.  I picked up my Canon and the weight of it instantly reminded me of lighter days with the X100s.

Then the idea hit me that I might want to leave the DSLR world behind and go mirrorless. […] And there are some challenges with the X-Pro 1.  Again, the auto focus is nothing like my DSLR.  I can’t really use it for some of the things I shoot a lot–sports.

Brad

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Timo

Hello. First of all thanks for the great site! Just wanted to share my  thoughts about switching from Canon to Fuji. Take a look @  http://timokoponen.blogspot.fi/2013/06/hello-world-and-switching-from-canon-to.html

“[…] I recently sold my full frame Canon kit (5D mkII, Sigma 35mm f1.4 and 100mm f2.8 L macro) and bought some magic beans from the Fujifilm Holdings Corporation. 2 magic beans, to be exact. Fuji x-pro 1 (with Fujinon 60mm macro lens) and x100. And oh boy.. those are some fucking tasty beans (and full of magic). When it comes to image quality, they outresolve my old Canon kit in every way, color, dynamic range, high iso.. and they are small&sexy.

Small and sexy. For me, those are important things. More important than the image quality from the camera (I mean, really, I could have bought ANY camera system on the market and the IQ would have been more than sufficient for my use). I think that Fuji cameras look really […] cool, simple as that. And they are small, not as intimidating as the big dslrs are, a big chunky dslr covers the photographers face and makes him look like a some kind freaky one eyed cyborg, x100 and x-pro 1 allow me to have eye contact with the model while shooting (which is nice, people tend to response better to someone who has, you know, a human face). […]”

Timo

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P.S.: You may have already seen this video, but also Samsung suggests to leave the DSLR world behind and switch to Fuji X ;)

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