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Olympus E-M1 with the Olympus 50-200 f/2.8-3.5 lens @ 283mm (566mm ~e) plus Olympus 1.4X tele-converter; 1/2000th second @ f/4.9, ISO 200; handheld |
Now that I have reduced my gear volume to only one digital SLR, I took the M4/3 camera and one lens with me "just in case." Since I was immediately somewhat disappointed in the copy of the Tamron 150-600mm lens that I had rented, I took the Olympus out at one point to see if that system focused accurately and gave me the crisp, micro-details that I was not seeing in the Tamron. I wanted to reassure myself that the problem wasn't my technique.
I didn't make many images with the Olympus, as I said, just took it out for less than an hour to provide a comparison for me to analyze later between the two lenses. I needed to eliminate my technique as a variable in my quest to maximize the quality of my images with the Tamron lens.
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Olympus E-M1 with the Olympus 50-200 f/2.8-3.5 lens @ 283mm (566mm ~e) plus Olympus 1.4X tele-converter; 1/2000th second @ f/4.9, ISO 200; handheld |
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1/400th @ f/4.9; 566mm ~e |
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1/640th @ f/4.9; 566mm ~e |
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1/3200th @ f/5.6; 566mm ~e |
Thanks for looking. Enjoy!
Dennis Mook
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Sounds reasonable. Many shots I saw with the Tamron were quite good, so your reasoning sounds about right. The Olympus is giving nice telephotos, too. But the problem I have with the smaller sensor is that the f-stop you use corresponds to 9-12 on FF cameras. This means no distinctive subject separation or harsh bokeh in the background, since it is not always possible to have a large distance between your object and the background. Disadvantage: larger and heavier lenses. For me, the nicer pictures are worth having to lug heavier gear around.
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