The Fuji X100T brought me back to photography

fjrabon

Been spending a lot of time on here!
Joined
Nov 3, 2011
Messages
3,644
Reaction score
754
Location
Atlanta, GA, USA
Can others edit my Photos
Photos OK to edit
So I think I recognized a few names around here when I just glanced down the board. I used to surf these board web talkins quite a bit. Then photography went from being a job I loved that happened to make money to a job that I did to make money. Then I left that job, but was still, more or less, out of photography.

I was shooting high school sports, with a dash of collegiate and pro here and there. At first the team picture days were the thing that did it. They became a drag. I learned a lot from doing them early in my career, but they became a drag quickly. Nobody wanted anything creative, they all just wanted the same exact picture that they'd been getting for years and years, flawlessly executed, and quick. I wasn't so much a photographer during those shoots as I was a logistics specialist.

Then even the games started to be a drag to me. At times some truly special stuff would happen but it mostly turned into a "I need to deliver x number of shots of the players, one of each player if possible, cheerleader shots, crowd shots, a few atmosphere shots, I need y % in landscape and z% in portrait orientation, how quick can I get out of the stadium when the game is over?"

I had become jaded. Cameras were purely utilitarian tools. I used a Nikon D7000, D3 and D800 and Canon 7D, 1DX and 5DMIII depending on who I was shooting for. I used some really incredible lenses (Canon 70-200 f/2.8 IS-II L being probably still my all time favorite lens). But they were all just gear. Heavy gear. Gear that marked me as a dude that was there to take some photos because somebody had paid him to do it. Gear that got the job done. And at times I did like it, but it was also just a job by that point.

So, I left. And I didn't regret it. Waking up at 3 AM to prep for a full day of on site shoots at different locations was gladly left behind. Bratty kids whining about the hot sun, even though you were in all black and there all day, a thing of my past. And I was relieved.

I thought I'd pick up my personal camera more. And I did, but only very occasionally, and even when I did pick up my personal camera, 99% of the time it was because I felt some sense of personal guilt; $30K of camera gear sitting under the bed (lights) and in your closet (cameras and lenses) has a way of weighing on your mind. I didn't feel that thrill. And the stuff I took during that period showed. I still had my technical skills, I could still take a perfectly acceptable photo. But nothing I took during that period would ever adorn a room in my house.

And then, on a sort of whim, I bought a Fuji X100T as a birthday present to myself. I had had a good sales year, no other "frivolity" was calling my name, and I had always loved the feel and look of those things the few times i had seen them in person.

At first there was the "new gear honeymoon" phase, of course I was taking pictures with it. I love playing with new gear, be it a laptop, nice pen, new watch or whatever. But then something funny happened: I fell in love with *photography* again for its own sake.

With a camera that could go basically anywhere with me, that I didn't have to fuss with offloading a 80-200 two ring f/2.8, I actually *did* start taking it everywhere with me. And with the Fuji you aren't "that weird guy with a camera weirdly taking pictures, kids stay away from him please and if he looks at you funny yell and scream" you're "oh, that sort of vaguely hipstery looking guy who is otherwise just normal." Whereas people had an almost repulsed reaction about my dSLRs, everybody loved the X100T. Tell them that I can email them a picture *right there from the camera*? Game over.

And it changed my approach too. I used to be a "always shoot raw, always!" person. I fell in love with Fuji's JPG processing. Editing was previously this huge formal affair involving long hours and blurry eyes and coffee. Now it's mostly done on my phone or ipad, if it all.

I used to snipe away at a distance, everything nicely in rule of thirds, perfect shutter speed for the action, appropriate depth of field, all controlled manually. Now, I get in. I mostly shoot manual-ish still, but with auto ISO set up and exposure comp. That dang auto-iso these days, man I tell you what, it's something. To think you used to have to actually physically change film to do that.

Photography was, once again, about how I felt. It was again a release, not a burden. It was about my love of the image, my love of what I'm seeing.

While the X100T is a great piece of gear, and certainly not cheap, maybe my favorite thing about it is that it just gets out of the dang way. It's my favorite camera ever, because it makes things not about the camera.

It's like going from the finnicky girlfriend who you have to constantly worry about every little thing. She has all the measurements and is objectively way out of your league. She impresses people, but in a standoffish, aloof sort of way. But you don't like being with her. The Fuji is the classic beauty who just lets you relax and enjoy yourself and just have fun with being with her.

Every step along the way just flows, from carrying it, to quickly being able to grab a shot, to nailing the in camera JPG processing, to uploading it in seconds after shooting.

My D600 and D7000 are great cameras. All the glass I have for them are awesome. I don't love those cameras. I love the X100T.
 
Last edited:
Sweet camera.

Joe
 
Good post Frank. I was wondering where the heck you went. I still see you're following me on Instagram...but I don't post much on it. Glad to hear that that sweet new Fuji has rekindled the photo fire in you.
 
... hold on, you mean to tell us that you woke up one day ... quit your job, purchased a mirrorless camera with a fixed lens, started shooting JPEG, used AUTO mode ... and you are happier now ?
 
... hold on, you mean to tell us that you woke up one day ... quit your job, purchased a mirrorless camera with a fixed lens, started shooting JPEG, used AUTO mode ... and you are happier now ?

Well, it's not exactly auto mode in the sense of what I think we normally think of as auto mode. I set Aperture and SS to what I think are scene appropriate levels and then use auto-ISO, exposure comp and the viewfinder to fine tune the exposure. Which, I think with modern ISO is probably the most efficient means. Modern ISO at normal levels (on the Fuji between 200 and 6400) is, for all intents and purposes, just a setting, not an actual artistic aspect of the process. So, it seems crazy to me that most cameras make ISO the most difficult setting to change.

Basically, I control the artistic aspects of the photo (aperture and shutter speed), then let the computer start with a good guess as to the appropriate ISO, and then I look at the actual proposed picture and adjust with exposure comp, which since I've set aperture and SS, essentially operates as an ISO control. If the exposure starts to hit the ends of my defined auto ISO range, then I can adjust aperture or SS accordingly (or engage the built in ND filter).

Putting aside that relatively minor quibble, yes, that's pretty much what happened. I'm not going to sell off My nikon setup, but it's been relegated for mostly specialist applications. Anytime I can get away with the X100T, I will.
 
Welcome to the FUJI club. I have started to use auto ISO and JPEG with my FUJI as well.
 
Welcome to the FUJI club. I have started to use auto ISO and JPEG with my FUJI as well.
you aren't suppose to do that. You have to shoot RAW. Haven't you been paying attention? :biglaugh:


Good for you o.p.
Having a camera you love to use is important.
 
Welcome to the FUJI club. I have started to use auto ISO and JPEG with my FUJI as well.
Part of the issue to me is that a lot of raw converters don't do an awesome job converting from the Fuji, IMO. It's a relatively new sensor technology Fuji uses, and it seems like their in camera engine is actually better than what lightroom or ACR will do (I guess those are really the same as far as conversion goes anyway).
 
Another Fuji fanboy ... I have the 'S' ... love that camera. I haven't crossed that bridge crossing from RAW to JPEG. The fixed lens is very liberating.
 
I know how you feel. I for all the hate I have for my XE-1's viewfinder, the camera's shooting experience makes up for.

I pulled out my a700, and started missing the optical viewfinder, but actually using it, I missed the XE-1.

Now, if I only had the time to get out and shoot more :/
 
Welcome to the FUJI club. I have started to use auto ISO and JPEG with my FUJI as well.
Part of the issue to me is that a lot of raw converters don't do an awesome job converting from the Fuji, IMO. It's a relatively new sensor technology Fuji uses, and it seems like their in camera engine is actually better than what lightroom or ACR will do (I guess those are really the same as far as conversion goes anyway).

I have tried several converters and found Capture One to be the best one for Windows. I hate the interface though.
 
Thinking of joining the Fuji club as well! I feel the same as the OP regarding gear has just become a tool. This would be a great camera to just keep in my pocket at all times to shoot life itself, and all my personal photos. I should just go out and buy one right now. LOL
 
Thinking of joining the Fuji club as well! I feel the same as the OP regarding gear has just become a tool. This would be a great camera to just keep in my pocket at all times to shoot life itself, and all my personal photos. I should just go out and buy one right now. LOL
Well, I wouldn't say you can keep it in your pocket unless you have a jacket on. I usually keep mine in a small messenger bag along with a graph paper notepad, a book, a portable USB charger, some spare batteries and a couple other random things.
 
Welcome to the FUJI club. I have started to use auto ISO and JPEG with my FUJI as well.
Part of the issue to me is that a lot of raw converters don't do an awesome job converting from the Fuji, IMO. It's a relatively new sensor technology Fuji uses, and it seems like their in camera engine is actually better than what lightroom or ACR will do (I guess those are really the same as far as conversion goes anyway).

I have tried several converters and found Capture One to be the best one for Windows. I hate the interface though.
Yeah, I haven't gotten around to installing capture one on my new computer. Will give it a whirl soon though.
 
Welcome to the FUJI club. I have started to use auto ISO and JPEG with my FUJI as well.
Part of the issue to me is that a lot of raw converters don't do an awesome job converting from the Fuji, IMO. It's a relatively new sensor technology Fuji uses, and it seems like their in camera engine is actually better than what lightroom or ACR will do (I guess those are really the same as far as conversion goes anyway).

The problem you're noting is uniquely Adobe. The X-Trans sensor is a bit trickier to demosaic: Rather than the repeating four filter CFA that we find in a conventional Bayer array, the X-Trans sensor uses an alternating nine filter CFA.

cfa.jpg


Most of the major raw converters now support the X-Trans CFA (notably absent is DXo). Adobe's (ACR/LR) demosaicing algorithm fails to render the fine detail that the camera is capable of. Capture One as Sashbar noted does an excellent job as does PhotoNinja, Aperture, Iridient, SilkyPix, Raw Therapee, LightZone, DarkTable, and DCraw. Adobe in this case is odd out, but the imminent release of LR6 we are told should address and remedy this issue.

Joe
 

Most reactions

New Topics

Back
Top