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ianpiper

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  1. An excellent combination. I owned several X-T2 cameras and the 10-24 is a good match for this body size. Also, although this range has evolved to the X-T4, the improvements are not huge over the X-T2. So this seems like a good choice for an introduction to Fujifilm. Best of luck! Ian.
  2. The 35mm f1.4 was my first Fuji lens - I agree with you about its special character. I'd add to it the 18mm f2, the 90mm f2 and the 55-200 zoom. Each of them is special and each is a keeper for me. At the other end of the spectrum, I couldn't get on with the 60mm, or the 27mm pancake. Both sold on. I still have the 18-55 zoom because it is versatile, but I can't get attached to it like the others.
  3. If a larger bright viewfinder is important, then you won't be disappointed by the X-T1. I have both, and love the heft and general feel of the X-Pro 1, but the X-T1 has a superb viewing experience. I find the tilting LCD far more useful than I thought I would.
  4. I bought an Arca Swiss type L-plate from PhotoMadd - highly recommended. It's a perfect fit for the X-T1 (some of the eBay knock-offs don't fit perfectly, as I know to my cost, having had one scratch a camera base plate in the past). Once fitted you can get to the battery, cable and SD card doors, and it includes a new tripod mount which is on the lens axis. I keep it on the camera all the time, as it provides some protection and also means that I can mount it on the tripod in landscape or format configuration.
  5. I moved away from a Nikon D7000 as part of my overall adoption of Fuji. I use an X-T1 and it is the best camera I've owned. Combine that with the lens quality and I think it's a combination that's hard to match (without going to full-frame, perhaps). If I could just pick one of the major benefits of the X-T1, it's the usability. All of the controls are on the outside, and the degree of function button configurability means that you can get one-button access to most things you need to get to.
  6. Congratulations on your choice - you'll love it, I'm sure. For a long time I used just 3 Fuji lenses; the 18mm f2, 35mm f1.4 and 55-200mm zoom. Although I have since invested in many of the other lenses in the family, these are probably still my basic favourite 3. I do mostly landscape and building photography. BTW you might wonder why the 18mm rather than the 14mm, 16mm or 10-24. It's because the 18mm is a perfect balance of size and quality. The other wide-angle lenses are much bigger and heavier.
  7. Hmm. My experience of the people on this forum is that they know their stuff. And they also tend to take the trouble to check up on the products they use without jumping to conclusions about whether they are or are not broken. Didn't you even think of googling this when the second lens had the same behaviour as the first?
  8. No, that clunk is perfectly normal. Mine does it and it is a totally superb lens.
  9. Lovely images. I have to get one of these lenses.
  10. I'm currently saving pennies for lenses; I'd like to make the most use of my money, so ideally I'd want to take advantage of one of Fuji's cashback offers. I've done well out of these in the past. Anyway, I know that one deal ended at the turn of the year - does anyone know roughly when we might expect another one?
  11. I usually carry a Billingham Hadley Pro bag, with: X-T1 X100 35mm f1.4 18mm f2 55-200mm Samyang 8mm fisheye Set of Lee seven-five filters Spare batteries for both cameras Spare SD cards Cleaning kit Macro extension ring Clip-on flash Emergency rain cover Depending on what I'm doing that day, I might also have an iPad mini in the back compartment and an 11in MacBook Air inside behind the padded sections. I suspect that the Hadley Pro might possibly exist in more than 3 dimensions, as it is a bit of a Tardis.
  12. I'd say it is, and at just under £300 in the UK it is incredible value for money. Remarkable as the X-Pro2 is, my take on it is that its innovations will surely find their way into the next generation of X-T models, and then I'd open my wallet. I also own an X-T1 and an X100, but there is a place in my collection for this for sure. These three are to me the real classic Fujis; each was first in its particular way, and each was hugely successful for good reason.
  13. I would like to get to the bottom of the issue with opening RAW files out of Lightroom into Photoshop. Sometimes I get a message saying something like "Unable to use the Camera Raw plug-in. It is not compatible with this version of Photoshop." Sometimes I get no message, and Photoshop opens but loads no image. I'm on a Mac, and I've tried v6.7, 8.8 and 9.3 of the ACR plugin in the folders under /Library/Application support/Adobe/Plug-ins/... Has anyone here had a similar experience, or know of a fix? Ian. --
  14. I've owned most of the Fuji X series cameras, and my current line-up is an X100, X-T1 and X-Pro1. These three are keepers for me - even when I move on to other cameras I doubt that I would sell any of these. For street photography, the X100(/S/T) is compact and unobtrusive. You can carry it in a fairly large coat pocket. Usability is really good - the fact that all the controls are on the outside was one of the big things that sold me when I bought my X100. The X-Pro1 has a similar form factor but is much bigger and heavier. On the other hand it has interchangeable lenses, while the X100's options are more limited. For nature/landscape photography the X-T1 is brilliant. It is weatherproofed, has a nice bright viewfinder and has external controls for extra things like ISO, drive setting and photometry. It is the best camera I have ever owned. The only things I can envisage improving it are the things announced for the X-Pro2 - dual slots, combined ISO/shutter speed controls, 24 MP sensor. By the way, there is life in the old X-Pro1 dog yet, and you can buy it new in the UK for only £300. I expect that price will drop now that its successor is out. You could do worse than buying one of these and spending the money you've saved on lenses. And with the sole exception of the 60mm macro, I've had nothing but superlative performance from my Fuji glass. I noticed several folks suggesting the XT10. I know it's keenly priced compared to the X-T1, but I've handled one and it feels a little - clunky - to me. Summary: if you want a camera that covers the uses you set out, I'd go for the X-Pro1 if you are short of cash or the X-T1 if money's no object. If you want to start with one lens to sell you on the Fuji way it has to be the 35mm f1.4 for me - my favourite lens. If you want to travel light get the 18-55 mm and 55-200 mm lenses. If you don't mind carrying stuff and money's no object I'd suggest the 35mm f1.4 or f2, the 10-24mm f4 zoom, the 56mm f1.2, the 90mm f2, the 55-200mm and also wait for the 120mm macro that is on the roadmap.
  15. Good for you. I disagree with your analysis of Fuji's approach, but how you spend your hard-earned cash is your choice, and I hope that your Leica will be your perfect camera. I personally agree with the folks at DigitalRev (http://www.digitalrev.com/article/has-leica-lost-its-mojo/NDI0NjU5NTU5), that Leica has lost its way; huge, heavy, pricey cameras with nothing more to offer than the lovely Fujis. But it's not an issue for me since I've committed to Fuji and am very comfortable with my choice.
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