What camera to choose when descending into the sulfur mines? Sebastian knew just the tool for this job — his well-tried and trusted Fuji X100F. Covered in brimstone, it lived to tell the tale…..
Bill discovers discovers that all is not as well as expected with Fuji's new X100F but.....
Setting up a modern digital camera to your own preferences is a bit like skinning a cat. There are many ways. Bill likes Ian MacDonald's interpretation and wants to share it with you....
Bill has taken the new Fuji X100F out on the streets of London. These are his first impressions....
Bill welcomes the new Fuji X100F and checks of his predications: Five out of six ain't bad, he says....
How much is that doggie in the window? Bill’s poor old X100T is optimistically wagging its wrist strap in some Fuji shop far, far away. Abandoned but not forgotten. But why now? The new litter hasn’t even arrived yet.
Bill has a brief encounter with a rather jealous Fuji X100T as he brushes past his gear shelf. Quo Vadis, little Fuji?
In simple terms there are two types of photographic accessory in the world—the useful and the decorative. In the latter category fall things like Hello Kitty flashguns and selfie sticks and any camera strap that proclaims the brand of your equipment in letters an inch high. In the former, there's a cornucopia of kit that professes to make our photographic life better—improve our image, so to speak.
Bill Palmer wrote that he would not be buying the Fuji. This is how he came to eat his words
Back in January I compared the Fuji X100T with the X-T1 as a tool for the street photographer. At the time I couldn't make up my mind which I preferred. Since then I've had more experience with both cameras and it is the X100T that has had to go. The X-T1 is also a great street photographer tool and performs flawlessly. I'm willing to give up the complexities of the optical/electronic viewfinder system for the greater versatility of the interchangeable-lens X-T1.
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