Ces1um
Member
I have mostly pentax glass currently, but all of it is quite old and I'm sure it's coatings have worn over the years. I don't think I want to get into using adapters at all frankly. I'm sure some people will tell me they work perfectly fine but I think I'd rather not open that can of worms.I would honestly rent or borrow a mirrorless camera before buying one. I’d want to be really sure I was comfortable with an electronic viewfinder first (or a Fuji hybrid viewfinder, which I found too gimmicky). I’m also unsure how much I would enjoy using a lens adapter, vs native lenses. I wouldn’t discount an aps-c Nikon SLR—you would gain access to half a century of Nikon MF and AF lenses for reasonable prices. You can also get nice modern zooms without spending thousands on the fast 2.8 zooms. I bought and sold a few digital cameras one-two years ago, and wound up with a new D750 (full frame “prosumer” model that is now discounted) and a new nikkor 50mm 1.8G, and have been very happy since. It’s a little bigger, but not heavy, and it’s ergonomics and big optical viewfinder are excellent. The full frame cameras only get *huge* when you start adding the high end zoom or tele lenses. If you have one small to medium prime or zoom lens, it’s perfect (in my world) to walk around with.
So from what I've been hearing m4/3 likely isn't the way to go. I've had everything from point and shoot, to mirrorless, to aps-c, to full frame dslr's recommended over going to m4/3. I've watched a few reviews on them and a lot of the photobloggers are panning them. I've seen a few people who are using m4/3 who say they aren't anywhere near as bad as people make them out to be. Very confusing overall.
So I went out with my gopro the other day and took some photos with it. They're 12mp and my new retina display imac can't fully display a 12mp image. It cuts off a good chunk of the bottom of the photo. I'm thinking if I can't display a 12mp photo on my 4096 x 2304 screen imac then why would I need anything above 12 mp at all? The biggest I'll ever print is 8x12 so I really only need about 8 megapixels to provide an acceptable result on paper. I understand a larger sensor provides other benefits over simple resolution/image size but there must be a logical limit to what a consumer would require in terms of sensor size.