Michael Kominik
| Aviation Photography

Blog

September 20th, 2019

How a Canon lens made me buy a non-Canon camera

For a long time, I had been shooting with a DSLR camera. I was okay with a crop sensor and I used some full frame lenses. I thought that the next step for my photography would be a professional full frame DSLR camera, allowing me to keep using my full frame lenses in the future. In the meantime, my Canon EOS 450D (Rebel XSi) was serving so well that I had no reason to replace it. I just needed to carry my full frame lenses, eventhough smaller and lighter ones would do the same job on a crop sensor body. I didn’t know it, so I didn’t mind it.

Last year, a new lens was introduced by Canon. It was the EF-M 32 mm ƒ/1.4 and I really liked it. Unfortunately, this lens was not compatible with my Rebel. This was the moment when I started to regret my choice of the Canon system in 2008 a little. Mirrorless cameras have made a huge progress since then and so many lenses are now available from several manufacturers. Switching to mirrorless sounded so exciting. Naturally, I considered buying a camera like Canon EOS M50, compatible with my older lenses using an adapter. But there were just eight native lenses available, including the 32 mm. And the new RF lenses from Canon can’t be made compatible with EF-M bodies even using an adapter because the flange distance is too small. The 32 mm lens was clearly aimed at people who had already owned an EF-M body.

I have read every recent ILC camera review on my favourite photography website Cameralabs. I have compared each camera’s parameters carefully and started to really like the Fujifilm X system, which uses a special colour filter array in their X-Trans sensors. But when I tried Fujifilm XT-20 hands-on, I couldn’t appreciate its ergonomics and it was quite pricy, too. Then I came across a blog dedicated mainly to photographing with the Micro Four Thirds format. “Micro” in the name may suggest it’s somehow tiny but its crop factor is exactly two, practically meaning lenses are half the size of a full frame system. And the same lens mount is shared by several lens manufacturers, giving access to plenty of lenses without any adapter.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-GX8 with tilted viewfinder

I was inclined initially to buy Panasonic Lumix DMC-G7, because it had a substantial grip, but I’ve found a great deal on Panasonic Lumix DMC-GX8 (above), which has a nice grip and also the in-body image stabilistation (IBIS). To see a comparison of the three systems side by side, I’ve created the following tables. I’ve included Canon EOS M50, Panasonic Lumix DMC-GX8 and also Canon EOS 250D, which has the same sensor as the M50 but also many more native lenses available without the need for an adapter.

item 35 mm eq. volume [cm3] mass [g] price (Q3 2019) [€]
Canon EOS M50   602 390 565
EF-M 15–45mm ƒ/3.5-6.3 IS STM 24–72 132 130 85 (in kit)
EF-M 55–200mm ƒ/4.5-6.3 IS STM 89–322 254 260 280
total   988 780 930
         
item 35 mm eq. volume [cm3] mass [g] price (Q3 2019) [€]
Canon 250D   794 449 530
EF-S 18–55 mm ƒ/4-5.6 IS STM 29–89 219 215 130 (in kit)
EF-S 55–250 mm ƒ/4-5.6 IS STM 89–403 427 375 290
total   1440 1039 950
         
item 35 mm eq. volume [cm3] mass [g] price (Q3 2019) [€]
Panasonic Lumix DMC-GX8   654 487 430
Lumix G Vario 12–60mm ƒ/3,5-5,6
24–120 243 210 370 (in kit)
Lumix G Vario 45–150mm ƒ/4-5.6 90–300 220 200 210
total   1117 897 1010

As you can see, these three kits have almost equal price. In terms of size and weight, the two mirrorless kits are better. A great feature of the GX8’s kit lens is the five times zoom range, while Canon kits offer a zoom range of three times with a kit lens. In addition, both the GX8 body and the kit lens are weather sealed. This is interesting because the price is currently the same as the Canon kits, which do not have the protection. But as an older model, GX8 is harder to find for sale. If you are interested in more features of the GX8, I recommend Gordon Laing’s review. Thanks for reading my first blog post and stay tuned for more updates via Twitter or Mastodon!