ptomsu
Workshop Member
Welcome back and all the best for this new part in your lifeHey guys, remember me? I've been gone for a long time. I sold all my photo equipment 2+ years ago when my marriage evaporated and I had to put my life back in order. TMI? Sorry. Anyway, my iPhone 6 is my only camera now but I've been thinking for awhile about getting back into photography with a top quality compact camera. I want to have a sensor large enough to have some control over DOF. Right now I'm favoring Fuji XT-1 (is it really a compact?) or Fuju X-100s. I love the colors and images from Fuji. But now the 109 has me intrigued. I did love my Leica M's, oh, the glass and the marvelous images, but they were too expensive and too hard to use so I had given up on Leica.
What do you guys here think is the best "large sensor" (define that any way you wish) compact camera (also define as you choose). Right now I want to buy the 109. Ask me again in an hour, I'll give you a different answer.
It is by intent that I post my question here instead of posting in a new thread. I still feel like you guys are my friends. Jono, I hope you don't mind. I love your review, it has me feeling quite enthusiastic about the Leica.
I do have the XT1 since almost 6 months now and I love it. I shoot it with the 1.4/23 and 1.2/56 and the kit lens. All 3 are excellent, but the 1.2/56 is my absolute favorite, especially if it comes to shallow DOF. So I recommend the XT1 - use it together with LR5 because then you can use all the film simulation modes on RAW files too. One of the best features of this system in order to get most of the looks you desire without spending much time in post processing.
Having said that my second system today is the Olympus EM1 with the 12-40, 1.8/75 and soon the 2.8/40-150 for wildlife. The 1.8/75 is definitely also a lens to achieve shallow DOF, enough for my taste anyway. And AF of the EM1 is even a tick faster too compared to the XT1, but this is not really significant.
WRT to the D-LUX 109 (or LX100) - I had a look and tried them. Great and relatively small cameras, but I do not want to get stuck again with a "P&S", even if this is a very advanced one. Meanwhile I rather would choose a Fuji X100T as my P&S, but definitely not as my single camera.
Hope that helps ....
Peter