Need Advice. OMD EM5 or X-E1 as FIRST SERIOUS CAMERA to learn Photography?

Started 4 months ago | Discussions thread
tedolf
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Re: Mainly agree with Ted
In reply to Mike Fewster, 4 months ago

Mike Fewster wrote:

tedolf wrote:

DR5ZEE wrote:

Ok I posted this in another forum, under the Fuji X- series section and got overwhelming responses and 99% were in favor of the X-E1. I originally had the OMD in mind but then I thought aybe the resin for such a response is because i posted it under the Fuji X- series section and not the OMD one..

http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/post/50811586

This was my original question:

[snip]

have shortlisted two, The Fujifilm X-E1 and the OMD EM5.

[snip]

Now which of these two excellent cameras will make me a better photographer..

Only learning about photography will make you a better photographer. Not buying a new camera.

It is a huge fallacy, one we see all the time where a begginer believes that getting a new camera will "make them a better photographer".

It is like suggesting that a new driver get a 400 HP Ferrari as their first "serious" car.

Clearly an invitation to disaster.

The two cameras you mentioned are the top end cameras of both manufacturers' range and are intended for experienced amature/professional photographers. They are very complex and frankly will baffle a beginner.

In fact, getting an overly complex camera will impede your ability to learn the basics of photography: DOF control, exposure control over high/low key scenes, control over focal lenght depth compression and expansion, utilization of negative space, etc. In particular, control over depth of field is something you could not have learned with the cameras you are currently using so this will be new to you and mastering it is not simple.

You would be much better served getting an entry level u 4/3 camera (e.g. E-pl2 or G3) for about $300.00 with kit lenses (which are fine-not "junk" as you stated) a moderate zoom (e.g Oly 40-150mm for $99.00) and a fast legacy 50mm manual focus lens with adapter for portraits (about $50.00). Using a manual lens with stop down focusing and a DOF scale on the lens is also the fastest most intuitive means of leanring to control DOF known to Mankind.

Then take a class, read a book or two or both. Then apply what you have learned with a camera that will not overwhelm you with complexity which an OM-d or X-e1 surely will.

You can always buy a top of the line camera later after you have mastered your craft. Your lenses will still be usable and you can sell the old body for close to what you paid for it.

TEdolph

Except that I'd get a basic full size dslr first. If you are starting and are serious you want to master aperture/shutterspeed/iso and ev range and understand how these controls interact. I think this is easier to do on a simple dslr with large dedicated controls rather than a camera which is highly customizable where you set these controls up. The latter is fine once you understand the controls and you know what you want each to do for your particular needs.

I still think a live view camera is better because it accellerates the learning curve.

Most entry level dSLRs don't have a good live view system.

Once you have the hang of these variables you will be able to move up to tjhe next level armed with knowledge about what you want the more expensive camera to do and you will spend your more serious $ more meaningfully to meet your particular needs.

And I'd add a basic software processing package to my budget. Something like Adobe Elements that has plenty of tutorial help built in. The camera is only part of the process that you are setting out to master.

Good point.

--
Mike Fewster
Adelaide Australia

Tedolph

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