This was the retro body that started it all. The poor mans Leica if you will. The image quality is top notch, competes with my newer 16MP files. Alas it is not perfect it is slow, between shots or if you need to do anything adjustment wise between exposures the lag time is more than noticeable. This is only a hindrance if you are a run and gun photographer. It requires a bit more control input, but the hybrid OVF/EVF gives you all the information you need for perfect exposures. And the one touch ND filter makes versatility a dream. The newer X100S/T have fixed the flaws but also changed to sensor and character of the original. Maybe a compromise but in the right hands it will translate your vision of the photograph perfectly or teach you to better expose your images through trial and error.Read full review
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
Geared towards hobbyist and professional photographers as a secondary lightweight unit, the Fujifilm FinePix X100 delivers the goods but not without having a few flaws. The X100's physical camera control dials lend themselves well for manual exposure setting. The aperture, shutter time, and exposure compensation dials allow for plenty of fine tuning without having to go into menus or having to deal with button and wheel combinations as with DSLRs and P&S cameras. Various automatic modes such as shutter priority, aperture priority, and full automatic enables this camera to be accessible to even beginner photographers and is a good platform to learn the basis of exposure. The build quality of this camera is superb. The metal body not only gives the camera a high end luxury look and feel, it also makes the camera sturdy and a joy to hold. Its retro design is executed beautifully. With a sensor size comparable to common DSLRs, the images this camera is able to capture are vivid with plenty of detail. The images are sharp with accurate colour rendition. The f/2.0 aperture allows for some sweet photographs with plenty of depth and lets the camera shoot in low light without the use of a flash or a tripod. Although, this camera excels in many respects, it must be said that it doesn't do so without having a few imperfections. These imperfections are mainly centered around the camera's ability to focus. Focusing is speedy and accurate in scenery with plenty of light, however that performance gradually diminishes as it's introduced to low light situations. The camera tends to hunt for focus or miss focus all together. Manual focusing is possible with this camera, however users will quickly notice that it takes plenty of turns of the focusing ring to move through the focal plane. The X100 struggles to keep up with fast moving action. Close up focusing can also lead to miss focus due to the nature of the camera's design that results in parallax when viewing and focusing scenes through the optical view finder. Even with the aforementioned quirks that the FujiFilm FinePix X100 has, it still stands as an amazing camera that can capture equally amazing photographs. It is great as a lightweight secondary unit for professionals and is perfect for vacation travels and daily lifestyle photos for general consumers.Read full review
Pros: It is small, looks great, light but not that light even it is better this way so you can hold your camera more stable. There are smaller cameras with smaller senzor size that can even zoom, but they are good only on a daylight. This camera makes wonders in the night! Ordinary dark street picture can become a fairy tale story with so many light and colors. You can set auto mode with 3 steps, even some people say you can't. Manual operations are very easy. If you want to learn how to manually work and learn to take great pictures with any camera, this camera is a step to it. Great options with many versions of the same picture, taken with the one click, so you can later choose the best one for you (ligher, darker, more or less color and so on). You almost don't need photoshop...almost of course. Cons: Not really for macro because autofocus gets confused, and manual infinity focus is a big struggle. Maybe with more patience it is possible but this is not for me. Even there is auto mode, it is not that good. You need to train yourself to predict how much ISO, aperture, shutter speed...you need before taking a picture. This is the purpose of this camera, so, not for lazy photographers. But you have many info options on your display/viewfinder that will help you manage this. Read full review
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
The picture quality of this camera is wonderful. This is due mainly to the APS-C sized sensor and lack of an AA filter. The controls are a little quirky and it definitely has focus issues in some situations. but once you get to know it it all becomes second hand. The lack of interchangeable lenses is a drawback, but is more than offset by the fast small prime lens it comes with and the fact that dirt on the sensor will never be an issue. It's other major advantage is it's size. This is a camera you can really take everywhere with very little hassle, much, much smaller and lighter than even a small DSLR. The EVF works very well and being able to use that instead of the LCD on the back is what really makes this camera work for me.
In its latest incarnation, with firmware 1.3, the Finepix X100 is an absolute joy to shoot with. Fuji should be given credit for listening to its customers and improving the camera through several firmware updates. Though the removal of the anti-aliasing filter in the X100S, about to be released, is said to give that newer version an advantage in resolution, the original X100 is already a camera that resolves a LOT of detail, even at higher iso settings, so I would not hesitate to get one used at the current very attractive prices. The hybrid viewfinder is ingenious and a great boon to those who, like me, love using an optical finder. Those who prefer an EVF will get a good one, not the best in class but one that is very usable. I shoot an E-M5 too, with a top notch EVF, and while the X100 might not reach that level, I haven't found it noticeably lacking. I only wish that Fuji had implement the Q menu option for the "raw" button, as they did in the X10 and do in the successor to the X100. There are three settings that are not on the center dial that I would like to be able to access quickly -- iso, "film" mode, and ND filter, since the camera cannot shoot faster shutter speeds wide open, a limitation of the leaf shutter in the lens, though the same shutter allows synching with flash up to 1/2000 second. As it is you can choose your options for the two buttons, function and raw, but the for the third item (in my case ND) you have to go wading through the endless menu. A minor but real annoyance. I'd have given the camera 4 1/2 stars if that were an option, since I think Fuji could fix this with firmware but chose instead to just incorporate the improvement in the new model. With that one caveat out of the way, I have nothing but praise for the X100. The files are very,very good, whether you shoot raw or jpeg. In fact many photographers who typically shoot raw, don't bother on this camera because the jpegs are just so good. Anyone holding back because they think the fixed lens (35mm equivalent) could be a limitation might be surprised how liberating shooting with a single prime lens can be. Though I have a stable of cameras and lenses, these days I find myself reaching for the X100 when I leave the house. It is portable; the image quality is superb, the operability once you are acquainted with the camera, is natural and allows you to concentrate on taking pictures, not on fiddling with the zoom. You're not going to go bird shooting with it; you'll need another camera and a long telephoto lens for that, but for everyday walk-around shooting, the X100 is appropriate and fun to use.Read full review
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