Cute.
I'm enjoying the PannyLeica Summilux 25mm on my sortanew OM-D too - I'll put
some images up soon. I rather like the way it renders skin tones while edge
details like fabric are very sharp.. And it's great just walking with a nifty
fifty.
But as an aside, some time back I bought the little dome hood for the 20/1.7
from Japan Exposures some time back - pricey but I like to use a hood and it
keeps that lens pancake - so of course I wondered. They're both 46mm filter.
Yes it works perfectly. No vignetting that I can see. Keeps things much more
compact. protects the front. Takes a 37mm filter or/and cap Turned out to be a
good investment.
Andrew Fildes
afildes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
www.soultheft.com
Author/Publisher: The SLR Compendium - http://www.blurb.com/books/3732813
On 28/07/2013, at 1:33 PM, Peter Klein wrote:
> This amused me, and it became a self-portrait as well:
> <http://www.flickr.com/photos/24844563@N04/9379366123/>
>
> OM-D E-M5 and PanaLeica 25/1.4 Summilux. Regarding Jay's (LUG) comment
> on the Fuji XE-1's detail, the little OM-D is no slouch either. This
> picture had some serious color moire on the lighter of the two pairs of
> dark pants (easily fixed in post-processing, and I like it better in B&W
> anyway). This is the first time I've seen moire in my OM-D photos. The
> weave of the tweed fabric is pin-sharp and detailed. The AA filter in
> the OM-D must be really weak, so it barely diminishes acutance, but only
> shows moire in really extreme situations like this.
--
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