A New Location, A New X

South Africa With The Fujifilm X100F

It has been quiet on this blog.

It has been very quiet on this blog!

It has been too quiet on this blog!!!

As I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, I will soon start a new assignment in South Africa for my day job. And the preparations for that, including already going on a business trip to Johannesburg for about two weeks, was not good for the progress of this blog. Preparing for visa application, traveling, intensively talking with the local team, takes time. A lot of time. And to be honest, during the evenings I was too tired to spend any time on the blog. Overcoming jet-lag from a 14-hour direct flight from Atlanta to Johannesburg is challenging for me.

Going on assignment this time around will be with a new approach: the family and dogs stay at home in the US, and no plans for safaris or other 'vacation' trips in-country. It also will mean a new challenge for my photography: my intent is to move more towards street and documentary photography, which I then will use as a basis for my Haiku, PicTales, and Essays.

A new challenge, which - of course - asks for a new tool (Noooo, this has nothing to do with GAS...).

Although I still love my Fujifilm X-Pro1, I wanted something even more compact. At the same time, I love the OVF/EVF combination of the X-Pro1 and wanted to have something similar in my new camera.

This more or less automatically led me to the Fujifilm X100F.

x100f-image-2019.jpg-2.jpg

Although this fourth iteration of Fujifilm's X100 camera is already two years on the market, it still is a great camera that for me ticks all the boxes:

  • it has a reasonably compact body (slightly smaller than the X-Pro cameras, and the pancake-like lens really makes a difference);

  • it has the OVF/EVF combo (and some more);

  • it has Fujifilm's magic sensor, with great film simulation modes (including the very popular Acros black and white film simulation);

  • it is a great unobtrusive camera for street and documentary photography.


The camera has a fixed 23mm (35mm full frame equivalent) lens. This could be considered a restriction but truth said, I only have two lenses for the X-Pro1 (the 18mm and 35mm) and I am pretty well used to shoot with only one focal length for a prolonged time. It actually will mean that I really need to work on my composition, which is a benefit from a learning and improvement point of view.

The fact that the X100F does not have interchangeable lenses makes it actually easier: no choice to make. And traveling light by design!

Since this camera has been on the market since 2017, there are already numerous reviews available, like those from Shark & Palm, Frederik Trovatten, and Samuel L. Streetlife. These reviews actually are triggering the thought that I maybe could start using JPEGs straight out of the camera.

Below are some first shots I made after purchasing the camera (side-by-side comparisons of the raw files and straight-out-of-camera jpegs), which made me very happy.

This is going to be fun!