Mysteriouskk
Active member
Should I get the close up adapter instead of the 20mm/1.7?
Is the kit lens decent in darker areas, like restaurants and temples?
Is the kit lens decent in darker areas, like restaurants and temples?
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No.Mysteriouskk wrote:
Is the kit lens decent in darker areas, like restaurants and temples?
Should I get the close up adapter instead of the 20mm/1.7?
Is the kit lens decent in darker areas, like restaurants and temples?
Would the 20mm/1.7 be the best lens in my price range (300-500) to take photos of food inside of restaurants? Is is better than the kit lens for these types of situations?
?Should I just buy it from Amazon?
Woh, dude, ease up thereOk, so what should I get?
E-PL1 with kit lens + Panasonic 20mm/f1.7
or
GF1 with kit 14-45mm + Panasonic 20mm/f1.7
I will mainly be taking pictures of food, some landscapes, and people.
What would be a good choice if I can only choose 1 or 2 lens?
The first store was a Best Buy. I asked the young clerk why it rotates and he said that is how you focus the lens. Obviously a bogus answer. It could be very easily rotated with my fingers, and as it rotated it would move out or in from the main lens, depending on the direction of rotation. Why would anyone rotate it? Right behind it is the anual focus ring. One couldget confused and rotate the front piece instead of the focus ring. Also, for the camera in Best Buy, if you were screwing in a filter it would rotate the front of the lens unless you grab it with one hand and rotate the filter with the other.I have to ask what would possess you to twist the front of a lens anyway? You'll either be over-riding the focus motor, stressing the zoom function or dismantling part of the assembly. Nothing good comes from it.
I doubt if it was broken in the store before you twisted it.
Thanks. That helps a lot.Brilliant to use and carry and totally silent in operation so very unobtrusive.
Not trying to sell the LX3 but the net result was very acceptable and the information on what I was using may help calculate what is needed in M4/3 land.
The 24-60mm equivalent lens was used like this....
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Which reveals a LOT of use at the wide end. Many times inside buildings and temples and restaurants the wide is very necessary. Often temple courtyards are very crowded and no way to step back so need very wide lens.
I used P mode and mostly ISO 80-200 with occasional 400 in the dimmer temples. But of course the f/2.0 lens of the LX3 helps a lot. There's no way I'd use the LX3 at 800 and up as that is rubbish, so that's where the M4/3 is way better with possibly 1600 being a nice safe limit.
Food shots were just grab shots in available light and worked OK, again that LX3 f/2.0 lens helped a lot, but bumping ISO higher is your M4/3 solution using the smaller aperture kit lenses available.
Translating that to say the (recommended) 9-18mm lens for M4/3 with its f/4 lens then I suspect that the ISO 200 to 1600 range would be a necessity for that lens in Japan.
Flash was only very rarely used so that's where the convenience of in-body flash is nice - it's a pain to carry a separate flash and never really use it.
Next Japan trip (oh yes, it's so nice there that I could happily go every year and keep exploring) I guess that I may go M4/3 with Oly E-PL1 or its successor and my plan would be 14-150mm for convenience and 9-18mm for those wide shots and maybe also the Panasonic 20/1.7 "just in case". I can see that food shots would benefit from the 20/1.7 as then you can use maybe ISO 200 and get tastier looking results.
But then again, I would be 99.9% happy to just use the LX3 again and also carry a 10x pocket camera for those occasional longer zoom shots.
The main thing is to enjoy the Japan experience and do not get bogged down by making the photography side of things too complicated.
Regards............ Guy
I will mainly be taking pictures of food, some landscapes, and people.
What would be a good choice if I can only choose 1 or 2 lens?
I second this advice. Actually either of the following in my opinion would be good:IMOP, the kit lens plus the 20/1.7 are all the OP would need. You do need a fast lens like the 20/1.7 (or a 50/1.4 MF lens) as the temples in Japan can get very dark inside.
An alternative to the kit (or the kit + 45-200) is to get the 14-140. This lens can stay on your camera all the time and you do not need to change lenses so frequently. Put on the 20 when light gets low. Keep it simple would be my advice when traveling.
Wow. The PL45 at $680 is a bargain and a must-buy.It is about 33,000yen here. (approx US$367). So about the same price I guess.
I think you see bigger differences with lenses like the 7-14(about 80000y / 865$US) or PL45 (63000y / 680$US)
Good work!Nevermind, I figured it out, the program is Wega2, freeware, VERY useful!
After much soul searching I went (finally) for Option #1 - because:Ok, so what should I get?
E-PL1 with kit lens + Panasonic 20mm/f1.7
or
GF1 with kit 14-45mm + Panasonic 20mm/f1.7
Glad to hear you finally made a choice - I think you will be very happy with this lens.eventually - I finally dug into my pockets and coughed up for the Panasonic lens which is wonderful (though IMHO expensive cf the camera body) for low light/indoors
I checked for this last week in Holland and came to the following best prices:After much soul searching I went (finally) for Option #1 - because:Ok, so what should I get?
E-PL1 with kit lens + Panasonic 20mm/f1.7
or
GF1 with kit 14-45mm + Panasonic 20mm/f1.7
The EPL-1 has IS built in
People/reviewers say the EPL-1 has better JPEG output straight from the camera
The kits lens folds up nicely - small is what I wanted
The price is cheaper than the GF-1
It feels more secure in my hand
eventually - I finally dug into my pockets and coughed up for the Panasonic lens which is wonderful (though IMHO expensive cf the camera body) for low light/indoors
I actually wanted this lens all along but was frightened about shake - hence the Olympus body.
On the other hand...
I loved the feel of the GF1 in my hand and the screen is better. It also has a spin wheel to control things like shutter speed and ISO. However the GF-1 kit lens was a bit bigger and not so compact - for me an important factor.
If you get the GF-1 get the GF-1 with the 20mm lens box set and then the Zoom lens separately. The 20mm is more expensive than the zoom so you will save a bit.
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--Glad to hear you finally made a choice - I think you will be very happy with this lens.eventually - I finally dug into my pockets and coughed up for the Panasonic lens which is wonderful (though IMHO expensive cf the camera body) for low light/indoors
The price is 'expensive' relative to the entry-level bodies from P&O, but definitely not relative to the optical quality of the lens.
Be sure to post back results when you're settled with the lens!