zsas
Member
+1 on the orig XA, have one and it is dandy!
Wow... I'm really liking the Hexar AF... and even the Hexar RF
I also like the XA though. Pretty sweet to have a rangefinder camera that compact. I wish the XA-2 didn't remove the rangefinder.
I'm looking for something that is fast to use, accurate metering, lightweight and cheap, and doesn't tempt me to lug around another 30 pounds of camera gear. If it has aperture priority, that'd be great also. Some degree of manual control would be nice, but not necessary. Is there such thing as a "professional" Point and shoot?
Something I can just throw in the back seat, for when my Girlfriend really dosen't want me bring camera gear in the first place.
My Rollei 35 would be perfect for this, if it was able to accurately focus close wide open
Either of these are great with the advantage of aperture priority and limited manual control available on the Nikon 35Ti.
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I've managed to create, in my view, good portraits with an Olympus Mju II.
I have one. But it's not a P&S, it's an SLR, different genre.
Still I don't understand the definition of P&S. Because with a camera like the Nikon F6 and you just point and shoot with it you would have much better result than say an Olympus XA which you have to focus, advance the film and rewind the film manually. In fact if you just point and shoot with an F6 I doubt that any camera can beat it in this respect.
I think the term P&S is really a misnomer.
It's not a misnomer, it's a term that many people understand very well. I don't see why the definition is difficult.
An F6 is a helluva lot of expensive camera to schlepp around just to do a very simple task. Why pay for and lug around a lot of extra capability that typically isn't desired in a P&S.
I also don't understand what you mean by "much better result." Whatever theoretical improvements the F6 might offer versus a typical P&S are usually moot. A P&S is typically simple and pocketable. And a pocketable camera tends to be in one's pocket.... and thus available right when you need it. As the saying goes, the best camera in the world is the one that you have.
An anyway, even as a long-time Nikon user, I can report without hesitation that the 35mm on the hexar AF is absolutely terrific. Almost without peer. The hexar body is also very innovative and small.
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