There is a special deal right now on the Fujifilm X-Pro-1 mirrorless camera if you purchase it with a couple of available lens options:
- Fujifilm X-Pro-1 – body only $799
- Fujifilm X-Pro-1 with 27mm lens – $799 (same price!)
- Fujifilm X-Pro-1 with 27mm and 35mm lenses – $949.85 (only +$150)
Yes, you read that correctly — the 27mm lens is essentially free with the X-Pro-1, and for $150 you can also get the outstanding 35mm f/1.4 XF R lens which is sold separately for $599! (This is the lens that is almost always on my X-E1 body.)
If you are interested in trying out the Fujifilm sensor system, like rangefinder-style bodies, and like to shoot with small, high quality primes, this seems like a great deal to me.
These days I use two different camera systems, depending on what kind of photography I’m doing. While my main system is based the Canon EOS 5DS R DSLR, I also use a separate system based around one of the Fujifilm X-trans mirrorless sensor cameras. I still use the original Fujifilm X-E1, even though it has now been superseded by newer models including the Fujifilm X-E2, the Fujifilm X-T1, and the less expensive Fujifilm X-T10.
The first of the interchangeable lens X-trans sensor bodies was the Fujifilm X-PRO-1. This was — and in many ways, remains — a groundbreaking camera. It combines an rangefinder-like optical viewfinder (OVF) with an electronic viewfinder (EVF). Some photographers prefer the OVF due to the immediacy of looking directly at their subjects. Yet the EVF provides additional useful image information, works better in low light, and shows the actual image that is picked up at the sensor.
Like all of the Fujifilm x-trans sensor cameras it uses an excellent 1.5x cropped APS-C 16MP sensor with a unique arrangement of the photo sites that is designed to reduce the potential for aliasing effects, and it dispenses with the anti-aliasing filter than is used in most digital cameras. The idea is that this produces better resolution than we might expect from a 16MP sensor — and in my experience it really works. I have made excellent prints from x-trans sensor images at sizes up to 30″ wide.
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G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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