Asher Kelman
OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Are you considering this camera?
If the URL's time start was preserved it would start where the FujiFilm interview would start. So about ~30 min conversation? I'll listen to the audio-only podcast later on my way home.
Pretty much a bunch of white haired old men talking about gear... The conversation's enlightening on who the camera is for...So you mean the part with 3 guys babbling around a table? It is still 30 minutes for what is effectively the cameras we knew made smaller by using a fixed lens and removing stabilization.
It’s bigger than an iPhone and almost the same size as the Fuji X series APS-C popular cameras.Pretty much a bunch of white haired old men talking about gear... The conversation's enlightening on who the camera is for...
It isn't a big secret that FujiFilm's niche has been to shadow Leica... industrial design of their X series APS-C mirrorless camera system harkens back to range finder and old film SLR... it's a fashionable camera that takes great photos and kinda looks like a Leica...
With this fixed lens range finder-aesthetic Medium Format... Fuji is again going after Leica's Q series full frame point & shoots.
They're >$1k cheaper... lighter weight... slighter thinner and narrower... 1cm taller. trade off would be a f/4 lens that has no IBIS or OIS... which is fair considering the physical dimension and weight...
In my mind this is a camera that complements flagship iPhone/Android phones.... as aptly described in the interview.
Pretty much a bunch of white haired old men talking about gear... The conversation's enlightening on who the camera is for...
It isn't a big secret that FujiFilm's niche has been to shadow Leica... industrial design of their X series APS-C mirrorless camera system harkens back to range finder and old film SLR... it's a fashionable camera that takes great photos and kinda looks like a Leica...
With this fixed lens range finder-aesthetic Medium Format... Fuji is again going after Leica's Q series full frame point & shoots.
They're >$1k cheaper... lighter weight... slighter thinner and narrower... 1cm taller. trade off would be a f/4 lens that has no IBIS or OIS... which is fair considering the physical dimension and weight...
In my mind this is a camera that complements flagship iPhone/Android phones.... as aptly described in the interview.
It’s bigger than an iPhone and almost the same size as the Fuji X series APS-C popular cameras.
Lack of IBIS doesn’t matter when there’s fast shutter speed and efficient low noise sensors!
A silent shutter is a winner for classical music performances!
Well this is not such a shutter. It’s a leaf shutter like shutters Fuji made for Hassrlblaxs!You summarised the 30' of interview. Thanks.
It is 134 x 90 x 77 mm. The X-T50 is 124 x 84 x 49 mm (I first looked at the X-M5, but it does not have a viewfinder), but you need to add a lens. Taking the small XF27mmF2.8 R WR as a lens, which is 23mm deep, we come to
112 x 67 x 72 mm. It also weights 735g versus 522 g for the X-M5 with lens. So it is a bit bigger and heavier, but surprisingly close except for height.
Lack of stabilization certainly matters with the resolution of that camera.
I think that most recent cameras have a mode where the shutter is entirely electronic and silent. My Sony certainly can do that.
It is as small & light weight as possible using year 2025 tech for under $4.9k.It’s bigger than an iPhone and almost the same size as the Fuji X series APS-C popular cameras.
Lack of IBIS doesn’t matter when there’s fast shutter speed and efficient low noise sensors!
A silent shutter is a winner for classical music performances!
If one already carries everywhere a modern smart phone, a walk around camera worth ALSO carrying must be in this class of lightweight MF Leica-like solid/feeling camera with a silent all-speed flash synchronized shutter and luxurious viewfinder to compose within a large FOV!
Asher
Well this is not such a shutter. It’s a leaf shutter like shutters Fuji made for Hasselblads!
So there are two RAW files then?You have to shoot both RAW and JPEG to get the crops. The JPEG is permanently cropped; the RAW is cropped but you still have the full-sized file.
No there's one RAW file but you can't shoot just RAW or you don't get the crops. So you have to shoot RAW pluis JPEG, even if you just intend to discard the JPEGs.So there are two RAW files then?
Based on a very quick perusal of some reviews, some of which spoke at length about the "crop" modes, but none of which so far really answered this question, my guess is that when operating in one of the "crop" modes the raw file is still for the entire sensor.
But that raw file may be somehow tagged to indicate the intended "crop" (so that if one converts the raw file to a JPEG file, without tampering with the converter settings, the JPEG file will be of the "cropped" frame).
Ah, one review seems to confirm this, mentioning that the intended crop is saved as metadata (presumably in the raw file).
But that's all only a guess. Hopefully we will get a definitive answer from someone here who has this machine.
Doug