@eow
Very nice... I assume you used the 20mm for that?
Hi,
Where is the cheapest GF1 in town?
Alan photo and Cathay is out of stock. Orient photo is selling $1200 wGST.
Thank you
@TsQ
The GF1 is slower (focus and shutter) compared to SLRs. So you need to think carefully about what you're going to use the GF1 for. At the end of the day, I find that it's a fun camera to carry around all the time and I get some great quality out of it... but it will never replace my dSLR (Nikon D80). The GF1 (and I've heard similar complaints about the EP-1) is too slow to even catch kids running around.
@TsQ
The GF1 is slower (focus and shutter) compared to SLRs. So you need to think carefully about what you're going to use the GF1 for. At the end of the day, I find that it's a fun camera to carry around all the time and I get some great quality out of it... but it will never replace my dSLR (Nikon D80). The GF1 (and I've heard similar complaints about the EP-1) is too slow to even catch kids running around.
Video will be better to catch kids running around.
Even my fast AF A700 had hard time previously.
I hv a Panasonic TM300 to cover the video part...
but now i wish for a still camera to hv video.. as there are really times u cannot hv time to swap... which is why i am considering aother camera from the 450D
previously was thinking GF1 or a canon 500D .. but seem GF1 is not so much of a SLR replacement so i think i am siding towards a 500D (or maybe a nikon D5000) since they hv 720P video recording
@Ouverture
When I was playing around with my GF1 over the past weekend, I had a really tough time catching my friend's kids running around Imperial Teo Chew @ Taka (not exactly the brightest of restaurants). Trying not to use flash to disturb other diners, I was cranking it up to ISO 800 (didn't want to introduce too much noise) in Shutter Priority (to make sure the shutter was fast enough), I either had blurred pics (i.e. shutter too slow), or I had missed the shot (kid moved too quickly). I didn't have my D80 with me, so no chance to compare response speed, but I never had this problem before in similar situations. Sounds like you have the right settings in place to catch your kids...
At a generic level, can you share your thoughts on this? (maybe kids were too close or surroundings were too dark.....)
Thanks.
@Ouverture
When I was playing around with my GF1 over the past weekend, I had a really tough time catching my friend's kids running around Imperial Teo Chew @ Taka (not exactly the brightest of restaurants). Trying not to use flash to disturb other diners, I was cranking it up to ISO 800 (didn't want to introduce too much noise) in Shutter Priority (to make sure the shutter was fast enough), I either had blurred pics (i.e. shutter too slow), or I had missed the shot (kid moved too quickly). I didn't have my D80 with me, so no chance to compare response speed, but I never had this problem before in similar situations. Sounds like you have the right settings in place to catch your kids...
At a generic level, can you share your thoughts on this? (maybe kids were too close or surroundings were too dark.....)
Thanks.
@Ouverture
When I was playing around with my GF1 over the past weekend, I had a really tough time catching my friend's kids running around Imperial Teo Chew @ Taka (not exactly the brightest of restaurants). Trying not to use flash to disturb other diners, I was cranking it up to ISO 800 (didn't want to introduce too much noise) in Shutter Priority (to make sure the shutter was fast enough), I either had blurred pics (i.e. shutter too slow), or I had missed the shot (kid moved too quickly). I didn't have my D80 with me, so no chance to compare response speed, but I never had this problem before in similar situations. Sounds like you have the right settings in place to catch your kids...
At a generic level, can you share your thoughts on this? (maybe kids were too close or surroundings were too dark.....)
Thanks.
guess this camera is for those ppl who really dislike a DSLR size...
but for those who already got a DSLR, it seems to be more like letting fo a bit of performance for the sake of the smaller size GF1
i fear if i change to GF1.. and it does not satisfy what i need.. then its gonna be a waste in some way as i need to go back to a dslr
@TsQ
The GF1 is slower (focus and shutter) compared to SLRs. So you need to think carefully about what you're going to use the GF1 for. At the end of the day, I find that it's a fun camera to carry around all the time and I get some great quality out of it... but it will never replace my dSLR (Nikon D80). The GF1 (and I've heard similar complaints about the EP-1) is too slow to even catch kids running around.
I currently have a Lumix FX-36..was thinking of upgrading to a DSLR (possibly Nikon D3000) but out came the GF-1.
Should I get a GF-1 or Nikon D3000? The main reason why I wanna upgrade is due to better image quality..and the main thing attracting me to GF-1 is its size..but 1.2k is really steep for a student like me and D3000 is in about the same price range too. =\ Dilemma. (I'm a female so the bulkiness of a DSLR is a huge turn-off, plus I like to take pictures on nature hikes..landscapes..so it's really a dread to carry a DSLR around on backpack trips. But I'm afraid GF-1's quality is not comparable to a DSLR and I would be wasting priceless photo opportunities)
Should I:
1) Sell off my Lumix FX-36 and buy the GF-1 (Convenience of both DSLR + PnS)
or
2) Keep the Lumix FX-36, and get a D3000? (so I can have the convenience of a PnS when the D3000 is too troublesome)