HenshinHero
If you love film photography, youll love the Fujifilm X100F. If you love point-and-shoot convenience, youll love the Fujifilm X100F. If you love high image quality, good colors, lovely bokeh, and a slightly wide focal length, youll love the Fujifilm X100F. Im a young guy, but I got my start as a photographer on film cameras. the X100F, as with all of Fujis X-series, comes equipped with three things that I personally value quite highly: 1. An optical viewfinder. As a bonus, theres a pop-up mini-EVF you can engage, which lets you manually focus the lens with a degree of confidence while using the OVF. Framelines, exposure information, remaining shots, a focusing scale, and even a histogram can also be projected into the OVF, giving you all the information you need to snap properly-exposed photos and take full advantage of the 24MP X-Trans sensor. You can, of course, switch to a fully featured EVF or use the rear LCD screen if thats how you prefer to shoot. 2. Discrete exposure mode controls in the style of old film cameras. The lens comes equipped with an aperture ring with third-stop clicks, and the top plate features a combination shutter speed/ISO dial. All three controls have an Automatic setting, letting you engage shutter priority, aperture priority, full manual, or full automatic exposure modes without having to fiddle with a PASM wheel. Thank god. Furthermore, you can create multiple custom auto-ISO profiles, specifying a minimum and maximum acceptable ISO as well as a minimum acceptable shutter speed. 3. Solid metal construction that actually feels like metal. So many digital cameras are plastic-bodied, feeling cheap and toylike in the hand. Even flagship DSLRs with their metal skeletons dont feel "right" to me; Im much more comfortable with the solid construction of my Nikomat FTN or Konica IIIa. Thus, the X100Fs sturdy metal frame just feels good. Its a solidly-built camera that actually seems like a piece of high-quality precision engineering rather than a mass-production piece of junk. Having the ability to take manual control over the entire exposure triangle without having to dig through menus or endlessly spin nondescript black multifunction dials is what attracted me to Fujifilm in the first place, but what will keep me is the fact that youre not sacrificing convenience or image quality to obtain these controls. The X100F is light and compact, easily pocketable inside a jacket pocket, but it never feels cramped. As an extra bonus, the X100F uses an amazingly quiet leaf shutter capable of speeds up to 1/4000, and unlike traditional focal plane shutters, is capable of synchronizing with flash units across its entire shutter speed range. This mechanical shutter is supplemented by an optional electronic shutter capable of speeds up to 1/32000, but it suffers from some rolling shutter issues, as many electronic shutters do, and cannot flash sync. Focusing is done by wire, the only major criticism I have against this camera. Its WiFi feature is excellent if you like to post on social media, and the camera remote app (in my experience) works extremely well for street photography, letting you fire the camera without touching it. The icing on the cake is how good the cameras JPGs look without any adjustment; just apply a film simulation and go. If you shoot RAW, you can even apply these film simulations after the fact, creating JPGs within the camera itself using a simple-to-use but powerful built-in RAW processor. And, of course, the camera just looks so damn good.
