I (hopefully) just replaced the weakest link of my photographic system: the camera I take with me when I don’t feel there will be any pictures to be taken and I don’t feel like carrying a 1.5 Kg rig for a walk for no obvious reason. It used to be this:
It’s Olympus E-PL1 micro four thirds camera with a collapsible kit lens, m.zuiko 14-42mm f/3.5-5.6. I stopped using it because it doesn’t have a viewfinder, the screen is terrible, the autofocus is terrible, and the camera is ergonomically so bad, that I almost gave up photography altogether, because of how much of a pain it was to use. However, when the iPhones started recording RAW, I replaced the E-PL1 with that; after all, I’m carrying the phone in my pocket every time I go out, and if it already has a camera that records 12MP RAW, why carry another camera that records 12MP RAW? The problem is, the 12MP number for the iPhone is a lie. The pictures are almost never good enough to make a sharp 4K wallpaper, which is somewhat more than 8MP. Also, they show signs of extreme overprocessing, regardless of the supposed RAW file. As a result, I took some very good pictures with a phone, that won’t magnify or print well:
The idea about replacing the Olympus with something modern with a viewfinder was in the back of my mind for years, and I considered Olympus OM-D E-M10:
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This would work just fine, and could be purchased inexpensively used, but it doesn’t play well with my Sony system: different batteries and charger, different menu system to learn and be annoyed by, different (worse) autofocus to be annoyed by, and different lenses that can’t be mounted to anything else. Then my son bought Sony a6700 APS-C camera that fixes almost all of those issues, and I liked it a lot: the sensor is basically the APS-C crop of my A7RV, the menu system is either similar enough or the same, and it’s small and light enough. The problem: all the lenses would work in crop mode. This would mean buying APS-C lenses if I wanted to remain compact, or using my existing large lenses on a small body, which doesn’t solve anything. I liked the form factor a lot, and my thought was “if only that had a 35mm sensor inside”.
Well, in fact there is a thing with that form factor, but with A7RV 35mm sensor inside, and it’s called A7CR:

It solves the problem, however it’s very expensive and I’ve been considering it reluctantly, because lenses were always a greater priority than cameras, because they actually create the differences in images. It’s faulty logic, however, because if I keep taking pictures with an iPhone because I left my camera at home, I’m going to get iPhone picture quality, not A7RV picture quality. And I did keep taking pictures with the iPhone occasionally:
It’s nice, until you try to magnify it, and after you clone out the lens flare reflections from everywhere.
The new camera uses the same batteries and charger as A7RV, so no redundant clutter. It has the same menu system, same sensor, and same autofocus system as A7RV. For all intents and purposes, it’s A7RV hardware with worse viewfinder and screen, and less ergonimical body shape. However, it’s small enough to be pocketable in a big winter jacket; if I use a compact enough lens, of course.
And here’s where I had the second actual issue, other than the price. The only compact lens I have is the 50mm f/1.8. I then considered this, and decided that the 50mm will be just fine for what it does, but I do need a good compact wideangle to accompany it, so I got a Sigma 24mm f/3.5 DG DN, which is very small and very sharp corner to corner, but at the cost of aperture, which I don’t care for in wide angle, since I mostly use it at f/8 to get everything sharp. I just want it to be optically brilliant, cheap and pocketable, and it is all those things. I also decided to get the Sony FE 28-60mm f/4-5.6 collapsible kit zoom, which is extremely sharp in the centre, but less so in the corners, but which will serve the purpose of an “iPhone replacement”; basically, if I could use the m.zuiko 14-42mm collapsible kit, which is optically horrible by all accounts, and this lens is certainly better, if somewhat shorter in range, it’s going to do just fine for things that would otherwise be photographed with my phone.

So, this makes a compact 61MP 35mm system with three compact lenses: 24mm f/3.5, 28-60mm f/4-5.6 and 50mm f/1.8, and I didn’t want to buy any more lenses before I’m sure I actually have a problem they are meant to solve, because longer lenses tend to be big, and if I’m bringing big lenses, I’m bringing a proper camera system as well.
The second use for the A7CR is to serve as a second body, which means it’s a legitimate part of my main system, not just a sidekick. If I need a macro lens on one body and a wideangle on another, this now works. Also, all files have the same colours and noise profile since they are made with the same sensor, and both bodies have the same autofocus system. Also, all the small lenses work on the main camera; they, too, are a legitimate part of the system.
So, this stupid bullshit is what I’m preoccupying my mind with while waiting for the world to end. 🙂


