Olympus OM-D E-M5 photos
Olympus tugs on your film-nostalgia heartstrings with the design of the OM-D E-M5.
Faithful to film
A little bit bigger than the Sony Alpha NEX-7, the E-M5 retains many of the design characteristics of the original OM film series. Those include the pyramid-shaped viewfinder protrusion, which in the digital version houses an EVF. Instead of a built-in flash, the camera comes with a small add-on unit.
Body
According to Olympus, the magnesium alloy body has the same level of build quality and weather sealing as the E-5. That would make it a pretty tough camera.
Tilting display
The 3-inch OLED display is the same size and resolution as the E-P3's, but the E-M5's tilts and supports touch operation.
Relatively small
The E-M5 falls into that class of mirrorless cameras that's smaller than a dSLR, but not small enough to be considered compact--especially when equipped with a zoom like the 12-50mm kit lens. I like the new lens design, though, with its programmable function button on the barrel.
Typical control layout
Except for the design of the power switch, the thumb-operated controls have a pretty standard layout. The camera also has a well-defined thumb rest, for easy holding despite the relatively shallow front grip.
Top controls
The camera has Olympus' typical mode dial, with the usual set of manual, semimanual, and automatic exposure modes, as well as a dedicated movie mode and Art Filters mode (with expanded options over previous Olympus cameras). There's also a function button, which can bring up Olympus' novel in-camera curve adjustment.
Viewfinder
The viewfinder has a big, comfortable eyecup and seems nice to use, though not nearly as magnified as Sony's. It's standard LCD, rather than OLED.
Operation
The camera has the now-common quick-access interactive display. In the bottom right, you can see the icon for the in-camera curve adjustment, which allows you to manipulate the exposure-compensation highlights and shadows separately. That's a clever idea that could either be a really useful feature or try-it-once-and-never-again tool.
New flash
Olympus also announced a new full-size flash unit (FL-600R) that seems designed more for the E-Series dSLRs than the OM-D models; it dwarfs the E-M5. It does have an LED light on the front for continuous illumination while shooting video.
Battery grip
Olympus will also be offering a novel two-part battery grip for the E-M5. Without the bottom, it's just an extra-deep grip for landscape shooting; with the bottom, it becomes a vertical grip. Because the horizontal grip is so deep, there's a duplicate control dial and shutter button for easy access.
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