Now that Nikon has launched its full-frame mirrorless
cameras, and now that it has been confirmed that motorized F-mount lenses will
be fully usable on the Z cameras (with the added benefit of in-body
stabilization!), it makes sense for me to seriously contemplate getting rid of
all my lightweight Fujifilm equipment.
One major caveat is, however, the electronic
viewfinder. Until now, I never wanted to part with my Fuji X-Pro 2, mostly
because of its superior optical/electronic viewfinder. The Nikon Z7 only has an
electronic viewfinder. It was praised by most of the people who have handled
the new camera so far, but I found one professional photographer who had this
to say:
“However, there was one thing that I really struggled with: the EVF brightness. When you look through the viewfinder of a DSLR, you see the scene at the same brightness as with your bare eye. With an EVF that's different because you're basically looking at a miniature Live View monitor, and you need to set the brightness level for that yourself. Several times I found myself being fooled by the brightness of the EVF, tricking me into thinking that I shot a nice and bright image with tons of shadow detail, whereas in reality the image was actually horribly underexposed. While it is true that one look at the histogram would tell me this, in the heat of the moment that sometimes did not compute.At first, I started to change the brightness level of the EVF to match what I was seeing, but that didn't prove to be a definitive solution either. I ended up more or less ignoring the brightness level of the image in the EVF and only use it for composition, light direction, focus, depth of field, and instead relying on the histogram for exposure. Overall, I would say the default setting of the EVF is too bright.”
This is not fully reassuring; it is exactly as I
feared. And so, I will have to wait until I go to Paris and am able to have look
myself through a Z7 viewfinder, to see if I can live with it or not.
I will also wait for all the hype and urgency to die
down a bit and for the prices to relax as well. I will keep reading the
reviews, especially those having to do with the viewfinder and the performance
of F-mount lenses, which I’m sure will be quite good —I just want to see how good exactly, because there is just
one small chance that it might not satisfy…
In the meantime, I will soon be putting up for sale my
entire Fuji kit, which comprises an X-Pro 2 body, 4 or 5 batteries, various
accessories, and the following lenses:
Fujinon 16 mm f/1.4
Fujinon
23mm f/1.4
Fujinon
35 mm f/1.4
Fujinon
56 mm f/1.2
Fujinon
90 mm f/2
Fujinon
55~200 mm