The Best Half-Frame Camera Ever Made | Olympus Pen F Review
Half-frame cameras are a fascinating way to save money on film, and the Olympus Pen F is the best of it's kind.
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 65
@mikeahmadi Жыл бұрын
FYI, if you grip the aperture ring and pull it outward you can rotate it so the f stops are on top.
@Glazehikes Жыл бұрын
Excellent video. Wow. And pairing this half frame with the Rollei 80 iso film looks absolutely stunning. Thanks so much
@jimcroce7156 Жыл бұрын
Fastest subscribe I’ve ever done. The pacing and informations of your vids feels very adequate to me. That combined with the jazz music is just perfect. Love it man!
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@gabgallant Жыл бұрын
Great in-depth review. Thank you!
@Raycolorido Жыл бұрын
my grandpa have one of this pen-f. great camera it is stil working and has a set of 4 original lenses
@theundefinedphotographer Жыл бұрын
This was a very informative video! I've thought about getting a half frame camera so that I can try creating diptychs. The Olympus Pen F looks great!
@paultaylorphotography9499 Жыл бұрын
A mate picked up a Pen F for me at an op shop a while back not yet had chance to run a roll though it. Awesome review cheers.
@thehonestguitarist65438 ай бұрын
It's a gem! Thanks for uploading.
@notyourdad Жыл бұрын
This is probably my favorite looking camera of all time, I just love it so much. I currently only own the original Pen which isn't as pleasing to look at to me but still a great camera.
@eyeofalchemy Жыл бұрын
Man, what a great video. Definitely earned my sub. Keep up the great work man. One day when I'm big, maybe I'll make videos as good as yours haha
@petercastell4450 Жыл бұрын
The f stop guide numbers seem to have been added to assist the rather unusual metering system in the Ft I understand the ring can be rotated to have the f numbers on the top, my 35mm f1.8 only has the f values. I have the F. I find using a meter (or a phone app ) adds to the experience of using film
@j.k5654Ай бұрын
I have 2. The FV in silver and a mint FT in black.I had kanto camera build in a split screen focus mechanicism in the fr. I love it
@krishnansrinivasan830 Жыл бұрын
Awesome & Thanks :)
@pdtech4524 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing, this is another retro camera on my radar. I currently have the Olympus Pen EE half frame camera. I've added your channel, hooefully you'll connect with another retro photographer?
@zacdonald99 Жыл бұрын
you deserve more subs
@brineb58 Жыл бұрын
I love the look and feel of my Pen FT ... since I loved DISC film, I am not concerned about grain from a small format!!! I dig half frame stuff, great for Diptychs!!!
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
I love Diptychs too!
@takaya4203 Жыл бұрын
There's another half frame, interchangeable lens, slr camera, the Konica Autoreflex which could also be set to shoot in full frame. It's one of the best underrated camera of all times...
@clarhettcoalfield3616
Жыл бұрын
This is a gorgeous camera, superior in so many ways to the Olympus Pen F, not only that but you can switch back and forth between full frame and 1/2 frame. Unlike the Pen F, you can actually focus the image correctly, where you can only guess with Pen F.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
That is true, but it’s not purely a half frame camera so I didn’t really count it. It is however a fascinating camera I want to shoot one day.
@mynewcolour
Жыл бұрын
I found the Konica Autorex bigger and heavier than I like and the shutter release button had a lot of travel. The images were really good and it’s fine to use. I think the 57mm f1.4 lens is ace. It’s great to have (effectively) a choice of two focal lengths for portraits. The Konica Eye looks like an interesting half-frame camera I’d like to try.
@robertcoates2752
Жыл бұрын
@@clarhettcoalfield3616 What do you mean you can only guess with the Pen F? The Pen F is an SLR so you focus like any other SLR.
@jessbaumung6541
8 ай бұрын
The Canon Sure Shot Multi Tele is a great point and shoot half frame camera.
@smallbatchsessions68926 ай бұрын
I’d thought about buying one of these just to have a candid camera always next to me . But in those situations you’d also like to have a very low light camera . A 40mm f/1.2 Voigtlander on a 35mm M mount rangefinder maybe. I’m also looking at the Leica M5 . Of course not as portable. The light meter is really handy for those fast candid movements that usually happen in dimmer lighting. I was thinking HP5 shot at 800 iso
@joeprete7424 Жыл бұрын
You can adjust the Aperture ring to have the F stops on top, it flips over. Just pull it a bit, and turn it around.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
Really? I didn't know. Thanks!
@heinundpiet
11 ай бұрын
Lenses with ("aperture") numbers 1-6 (or 1-7) are later versions made for the Pen FT. The numbers correlate with the built-in, but not synchronized light meter. You need to read the number shown on the scale on the left of the viewfinder and then set the aperture to the number on the lens. Quite weird, but once you get used to it, it works fine without taking your eyes off the viewfinder. All you have to do is count to the disered number by clicking the aperture ring from 1 to the number you want, and you're done. As described, to better use these lenses with the Pen-F (or FV), you can rotate the aperture ring 180 degrees to set the usual f-numbers.
@joeprete7424
11 ай бұрын
@@heinundpiet are you on Facebook? …we have a group Olympus Pen F/FT/FV
@robertcoates2752 Жыл бұрын
There are couple other purely half frame cameras that aren't zone focus and have interchangable lens. But they are extremely rare and extremely expensive. The Robot Royal 18 and the Leica 72. Both rangefinders.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
I hadn't heard of the Leica 72 before, interesting. Thanks!
@iarwainthabombadil772420 күн бұрын
thanks dud3
@iarwainthabombadil772420 күн бұрын
Ernie was right about the number 9.
@Halbmond5 ай бұрын
Seems to me the FT is by far the most practical version since it’s the only one with a built-in light meter.
@noahvonhatten
5 ай бұрын
I actually consciously choose the version without the light meter for simplicity‘s sake, however, yes, having one definitely makes the FT a somewhat more complete package.
@milliehutchings
4 ай бұрын
You can buy a specialised Pen F light meter that slots over the shutter dial on the front of the camera.
@TortugaUruguaya8 ай бұрын
Nice eyelashes
@clarhettcoalfield3616 Жыл бұрын
Well... 72 frames is cool but 54 are better when you can switch between 1/2 frame and full frame in one camera.... Yup, the 1965 Konica Auto-Reflex (north america) Konica Autorex (Asia)
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
That a really fascinating camera. Unfortunately I’ve never had one in hand.
@kevin-parratt-artist Жыл бұрын
The quality of film emulsions now are superior to most available when this camera was released. Loaded with Kodak Ektar, Portra 160 or ILFORD PanF or FP4 plus, superb portraits can be obtained. 👌
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
This is true! I agree, with modern film stocks the quality this camera can delivery is superb, I would say the optics certainly play a roll in that.
@kevin-parratt-artist
Жыл бұрын
@@noahvonhatten Yep. I'm in my 70s, so I remember Kodachrome 25, Agfapan 25, Kodak TechPan and Panatomic-X. .. all gone now, but available is a 20 ASA film from Adox. It resolves extraordinary detail, but like TechPan, when processed for maximum resolution, it can appear a tad flat. But the information is all there. I'm wondering about that 40mm lens you have. What is the closest focus distance? Thanks for the video, by the way. Cheers, Kevin.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
@@kevin-parratt-artist The close focus distance is .35m or 1.15 ft. Which isn’t bad at all in my opinion.
@kevin-parratt-artist
Жыл бұрын
@@noahvonhatten Isn't bad.. full stop! 👌
@dalex60 Жыл бұрын
“Really, really!”, “Very, very!”
@jamesal6138 Жыл бұрын
The Pen Fs shutter isnt on its side the viewfinders orientation is due to the half frame format, there is no way to get a land scape frame with the film running horizontally. The prism used is a porro prism through a series of mirrors instead of usual Roof penta prism type this is why it doesnt have the usual hump associated with SLRs not that the prism is on its side.
@noahvonhatten
10 ай бұрын
You‘re right. However, at the end of the day, relative to a normal 35mm camera the orientation of the viewfinder and the images on the negative appear to be rotated on its side.
@petepictures11 ай бұрын
Yea, they are lovely, mine kit was stollen, though.
@noahvonhatten
11 ай бұрын
That's rotten. Is there a chance you'd be able to get it back?
@petepictures
11 ай бұрын
@@noahvonhatten That one is gone, one day I will buy another , I had the 24-4 38-1,8 and 150-4 plus adapter for M42- + 50mm 1,8 takumar and tele convertor.
@randallstewart175 Жыл бұрын
Bought, tried, and sold off a Pen FT system about 30 years ago. The design of the viewfinder makes it relatively dim. Most models were the TTL metered version, which takes a third of the viewfinder light, making it really dim. Olympus offered an inventory impressive but expensive lenses, such as the 40mm 1.4 he shows here. But most Pen F buyers used the camera as a fancy version of the Pen snapshot pocket cameras and didn't pay the high prices for them - few were sold. Most lenses were hard to find 30 years ago, and are nearly impossible to get today. Summary: Great toy or collectible, but not a good user.
@robertcoates2752
Жыл бұрын
I completely disagree on that it isn't a good user. A number of the lens aren't that hard to find. Yes there are some rare ones. There are adapters to OM and M42 lens as well. The Pen F not Pen FT has a great viewfinder.
@randallstewart1224
11 ай бұрын
@@robertcoates2752 Actually, the original Pen F had several design deficiencies Olympus needed to correct immediately. These improvements were incorporated in the Pen FT, but its very dim viewfinder and clumsy number matching system for TTL metering took the edge off the system. The final model. the Pen FV, kept the improvements of the FT and eliminated the TTL meter, making the viewfinder reasonable to use. The FV was treated as a "lesser" or cheaper model at the time (late 1960s), so not so many were sold compared to the FT, but today, the FV is more highly prized, as shown by its used price (often triple an FT) and infrequent availability. Considering that the half frame format was always more a consumer, casual snap shooter usage, there are a number of Canon and other fixed lens models which are smaller, lighter, easier to use, and have lenses of equal or better performance than the Pen F. The only thing the Pen F has going for it is its mutli-lens interchangeability in competition with full frame SLRs, a contest which it eventually lost.
@randallstewart1224
3 ай бұрын
@@robertcoates2752 The FT introduced some significant internal improvements over the original version, but its TTL metering negatively compensated for those. The very last model (FV?) had the FT improvements, but dropped the internal metering, resulting in a reasonable viewfinder as well. It was intended as a cheapened version to milk the last customers before closing out the Pen-F, but now it is by far the most expensive used version and very hard to find. If I had known more about the camera system details when I bought my FT, I would have gotten an FV and wrapped up a decent spread of lenses/shades, etc, while there was still a chance to do so. My experience with the FT was so negative that I unloaded everything immediately.
@datMinii Жыл бұрын
Nice video! I probably won't get one myself but I think half-frames are pretty neat :) One thing I want to point out though is that smaller image size doesn't necessarily mean lower image quality... the half-frame is simply a cropped full-frame, and this has no impact on resolution or clarity. Those things depend on the lens and film characteristics rather than imaging size. This is unlike in digital cameras, where smaller sensors have the potential to increase the electrical noise in your image. And in fact, between a crop sensor and a full-frame sensor with the same number of megapixels, the crop technically has greater resolution. However, one aspect of image quality that smaller imaging area does affect, as you mentioned, is depth of field as it may require you to step back from the subject to fit it in the frame.
@iop223
Жыл бұрын
the grain size is what ends up being affected as you will need to enlarge the image 2x of that of the 35mm negative. This is why i pretty much only shoot my pen f on ektar
@datMinii
Жыл бұрын
@@iop223 For sure, enlarging any photo totally does make grain more apparent, and so the fine grain of Ektar makes it a great pick :)
@HenrySavageMode
Жыл бұрын
None of this is accurate
@datMinii
Жыл бұрын
@@HenrySavageMode Care to elaborate? If I'm wrong I would love to learn
@dcloudАй бұрын
Films are shot on half frame size
@StanleyKubick1 Жыл бұрын
one of the few talking head photography videos that doesn't infuriate and annoy me
@chumleyk Жыл бұрын
Basically an aps-c film camera... snort
@peterwilliamson2488 Жыл бұрын
How do you manage to save money using half-frame because there is no saving in film processing because the film is the same length as a 36 exp .As for printing nobody is going to print 72 prints for the cost of 36 .I just can’t see how it is any cheaper.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
I don’t often print my photos, and while of course the processing costs don’t change, 72 photos is still twice as many photos at the same price as 36 with a conventional camera if you think of it as cost per frame.
@ivanmuniz9812 Жыл бұрын
One of the most pleasing looking body designs. Only gripe is portrait mode. Shooting stealth street in landscape can be a little frustrating. Who cares? I’m going to load up mine right now. Long overdue…
Пікірлер: 65
FYI, if you grip the aperture ring and pull it outward you can rotate it so the f stops are on top.
Excellent video. Wow. And pairing this half frame with the Rollei 80 iso film looks absolutely stunning. Thanks so much
Fastest subscribe I’ve ever done. The pacing and informations of your vids feels very adequate to me. That combined with the jazz music is just perfect. Love it man!
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
Great in-depth review. Thank you!
my grandpa have one of this pen-f. great camera it is stil working and has a set of 4 original lenses
This was a very informative video! I've thought about getting a half frame camera so that I can try creating diptychs. The Olympus Pen F looks great!
A mate picked up a Pen F for me at an op shop a while back not yet had chance to run a roll though it. Awesome review cheers.
It's a gem! Thanks for uploading.
This is probably my favorite looking camera of all time, I just love it so much. I currently only own the original Pen which isn't as pleasing to look at to me but still a great camera.
Man, what a great video. Definitely earned my sub. Keep up the great work man. One day when I'm big, maybe I'll make videos as good as yours haha
The f stop guide numbers seem to have been added to assist the rather unusual metering system in the Ft I understand the ring can be rotated to have the f numbers on the top, my 35mm f1.8 only has the f values. I have the F. I find using a meter (or a phone app ) adds to the experience of using film
I have 2. The FV in silver and a mint FT in black.I had kanto camera build in a split screen focus mechanicism in the fr. I love it
Awesome & Thanks :)
Thanks for sharing, this is another retro camera on my radar. I currently have the Olympus Pen EE half frame camera. I've added your channel, hooefully you'll connect with another retro photographer?
you deserve more subs
I love the look and feel of my Pen FT ... since I loved DISC film, I am not concerned about grain from a small format!!! I dig half frame stuff, great for Diptychs!!!
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
I love Diptychs too!
There's another half frame, interchangeable lens, slr camera, the Konica Autoreflex which could also be set to shoot in full frame. It's one of the best underrated camera of all times...
@clarhettcoalfield3616
Жыл бұрын
This is a gorgeous camera, superior in so many ways to the Olympus Pen F, not only that but you can switch back and forth between full frame and 1/2 frame. Unlike the Pen F, you can actually focus the image correctly, where you can only guess with Pen F.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
That is true, but it’s not purely a half frame camera so I didn’t really count it. It is however a fascinating camera I want to shoot one day.
@mynewcolour
Жыл бұрын
I found the Konica Autorex bigger and heavier than I like and the shutter release button had a lot of travel. The images were really good and it’s fine to use. I think the 57mm f1.4 lens is ace. It’s great to have (effectively) a choice of two focal lengths for portraits. The Konica Eye looks like an interesting half-frame camera I’d like to try.
@robertcoates2752
Жыл бұрын
@@clarhettcoalfield3616 What do you mean you can only guess with the Pen F? The Pen F is an SLR so you focus like any other SLR.
@jessbaumung6541
8 ай бұрын
The Canon Sure Shot Multi Tele is a great point and shoot half frame camera.
I’d thought about buying one of these just to have a candid camera always next to me . But in those situations you’d also like to have a very low light camera . A 40mm f/1.2 Voigtlander on a 35mm M mount rangefinder maybe. I’m also looking at the Leica M5 . Of course not as portable. The light meter is really handy for those fast candid movements that usually happen in dimmer lighting. I was thinking HP5 shot at 800 iso
You can adjust the Aperture ring to have the F stops on top, it flips over. Just pull it a bit, and turn it around.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
Really? I didn't know. Thanks!
@heinundpiet
11 ай бұрын
Lenses with ("aperture") numbers 1-6 (or 1-7) are later versions made for the Pen FT. The numbers correlate with the built-in, but not synchronized light meter. You need to read the number shown on the scale on the left of the viewfinder and then set the aperture to the number on the lens. Quite weird, but once you get used to it, it works fine without taking your eyes off the viewfinder. All you have to do is count to the disered number by clicking the aperture ring from 1 to the number you want, and you're done. As described, to better use these lenses with the Pen-F (or FV), you can rotate the aperture ring 180 degrees to set the usual f-numbers.
@joeprete7424
11 ай бұрын
@@heinundpiet are you on Facebook? …we have a group Olympus Pen F/FT/FV
There are couple other purely half frame cameras that aren't zone focus and have interchangable lens. But they are extremely rare and extremely expensive. The Robot Royal 18 and the Leica 72. Both rangefinders.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
I hadn't heard of the Leica 72 before, interesting. Thanks!
thanks dud3
Ernie was right about the number 9.
Seems to me the FT is by far the most practical version since it’s the only one with a built-in light meter.
@noahvonhatten
5 ай бұрын
I actually consciously choose the version without the light meter for simplicity‘s sake, however, yes, having one definitely makes the FT a somewhat more complete package.
@milliehutchings
4 ай бұрын
You can buy a specialised Pen F light meter that slots over the shutter dial on the front of the camera.
Nice eyelashes
Well... 72 frames is cool but 54 are better when you can switch between 1/2 frame and full frame in one camera.... Yup, the 1965 Konica Auto-Reflex (north america) Konica Autorex (Asia)
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
That a really fascinating camera. Unfortunately I’ve never had one in hand.
The quality of film emulsions now are superior to most available when this camera was released. Loaded with Kodak Ektar, Portra 160 or ILFORD PanF or FP4 plus, superb portraits can be obtained. 👌
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
This is true! I agree, with modern film stocks the quality this camera can delivery is superb, I would say the optics certainly play a roll in that.
@kevin-parratt-artist
Жыл бұрын
@@noahvonhatten Yep. I'm in my 70s, so I remember Kodachrome 25, Agfapan 25, Kodak TechPan and Panatomic-X. .. all gone now, but available is a 20 ASA film from Adox. It resolves extraordinary detail, but like TechPan, when processed for maximum resolution, it can appear a tad flat. But the information is all there. I'm wondering about that 40mm lens you have. What is the closest focus distance? Thanks for the video, by the way. Cheers, Kevin.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
@@kevin-parratt-artist The close focus distance is .35m or 1.15 ft. Which isn’t bad at all in my opinion.
@kevin-parratt-artist
Жыл бұрын
@@noahvonhatten Isn't bad.. full stop! 👌
“Really, really!”, “Very, very!”
The Pen Fs shutter isnt on its side the viewfinders orientation is due to the half frame format, there is no way to get a land scape frame with the film running horizontally. The prism used is a porro prism through a series of mirrors instead of usual Roof penta prism type this is why it doesnt have the usual hump associated with SLRs not that the prism is on its side.
@noahvonhatten
10 ай бұрын
You‘re right. However, at the end of the day, relative to a normal 35mm camera the orientation of the viewfinder and the images on the negative appear to be rotated on its side.
Yea, they are lovely, mine kit was stollen, though.
@noahvonhatten
11 ай бұрын
That's rotten. Is there a chance you'd be able to get it back?
@petepictures
11 ай бұрын
@@noahvonhatten That one is gone, one day I will buy another , I had the 24-4 38-1,8 and 150-4 plus adapter for M42- + 50mm 1,8 takumar and tele convertor.
Bought, tried, and sold off a Pen FT system about 30 years ago. The design of the viewfinder makes it relatively dim. Most models were the TTL metered version, which takes a third of the viewfinder light, making it really dim. Olympus offered an inventory impressive but expensive lenses, such as the 40mm 1.4 he shows here. But most Pen F buyers used the camera as a fancy version of the Pen snapshot pocket cameras and didn't pay the high prices for them - few were sold. Most lenses were hard to find 30 years ago, and are nearly impossible to get today. Summary: Great toy or collectible, but not a good user.
@robertcoates2752
Жыл бұрын
I completely disagree on that it isn't a good user. A number of the lens aren't that hard to find. Yes there are some rare ones. There are adapters to OM and M42 lens as well. The Pen F not Pen FT has a great viewfinder.
@randallstewart1224
11 ай бұрын
@@robertcoates2752 Actually, the original Pen F had several design deficiencies Olympus needed to correct immediately. These improvements were incorporated in the Pen FT, but its very dim viewfinder and clumsy number matching system for TTL metering took the edge off the system. The final model. the Pen FV, kept the improvements of the FT and eliminated the TTL meter, making the viewfinder reasonable to use. The FV was treated as a "lesser" or cheaper model at the time (late 1960s), so not so many were sold compared to the FT, but today, the FV is more highly prized, as shown by its used price (often triple an FT) and infrequent availability. Considering that the half frame format was always more a consumer, casual snap shooter usage, there are a number of Canon and other fixed lens models which are smaller, lighter, easier to use, and have lenses of equal or better performance than the Pen F. The only thing the Pen F has going for it is its mutli-lens interchangeability in competition with full frame SLRs, a contest which it eventually lost.
@randallstewart1224
3 ай бұрын
@@robertcoates2752 The FT introduced some significant internal improvements over the original version, but its TTL metering negatively compensated for those. The very last model (FV?) had the FT improvements, but dropped the internal metering, resulting in a reasonable viewfinder as well. It was intended as a cheapened version to milk the last customers before closing out the Pen-F, but now it is by far the most expensive used version and very hard to find. If I had known more about the camera system details when I bought my FT, I would have gotten an FV and wrapped up a decent spread of lenses/shades, etc, while there was still a chance to do so. My experience with the FT was so negative that I unloaded everything immediately.
Nice video! I probably won't get one myself but I think half-frames are pretty neat :) One thing I want to point out though is that smaller image size doesn't necessarily mean lower image quality... the half-frame is simply a cropped full-frame, and this has no impact on resolution or clarity. Those things depend on the lens and film characteristics rather than imaging size. This is unlike in digital cameras, where smaller sensors have the potential to increase the electrical noise in your image. And in fact, between a crop sensor and a full-frame sensor with the same number of megapixels, the crop technically has greater resolution. However, one aspect of image quality that smaller imaging area does affect, as you mentioned, is depth of field as it may require you to step back from the subject to fit it in the frame.
@iop223
Жыл бұрын
the grain size is what ends up being affected as you will need to enlarge the image 2x of that of the 35mm negative. This is why i pretty much only shoot my pen f on ektar
@datMinii
Жыл бұрын
@@iop223 For sure, enlarging any photo totally does make grain more apparent, and so the fine grain of Ektar makes it a great pick :)
@HenrySavageMode
Жыл бұрын
None of this is accurate
@datMinii
Жыл бұрын
@@HenrySavageMode Care to elaborate? If I'm wrong I would love to learn
Films are shot on half frame size
one of the few talking head photography videos that doesn't infuriate and annoy me
Basically an aps-c film camera... snort
How do you manage to save money using half-frame because there is no saving in film processing because the film is the same length as a 36 exp .As for printing nobody is going to print 72 prints for the cost of 36 .I just can’t see how it is any cheaper.
@noahvonhatten
Жыл бұрын
I don’t often print my photos, and while of course the processing costs don’t change, 72 photos is still twice as many photos at the same price as 36 with a conventional camera if you think of it as cost per frame.
One of the most pleasing looking body designs. Only gripe is portrait mode. Shooting stealth street in landscape can be a little frustrating. Who cares? I’m going to load up mine right now. Long overdue…