The latest micro four-thirds camera from Olympus is clearly designed to appeal to all those hoary, wizened photographers who long for the good ol' days.
Olympus' new digital OM series is modeled after the company's original, beloved OM film cameras from the 1970s. But the new OM-D line is not just some tossed-off homage – the first camera in the line, the E-M5, is a fantastic picture-making tool.
Olympus' new digital OM series is modeled after the company's original, beloved OM film cameras from the 1970s.It makes excellent RAW and JPEG images, and it is certainly the most customizable compact today. And the thoroughly modern design – a magnesium-clad, weather-sealed body – is so masterfully executed that I bet a lot of the "if it's not curvy, it's crap" cognoscenti will be wooed by it.
At the heart of the E-M5 is a collection of core features that makes it quite possibly the best-performing micro four-thirds camera on the market today: a new 16-megapixel TruPic VI image sensor, a speedy processor, the five-axis mechanical image stabilization system, an articulated OLED touchscreen and a high-speed lens drive control.
Both RAW and JPEG images can fly into the E-M5 at a 9fps burst rate with awfully impressive results up to ISO 6,400. Olympus' default algorithms tend to over-sharpen JPEGs (this can be dialed down in-camera), but they are still on par with the tops in the mirrorless realm. RAW images are equally pleasing, with lots of highlight and shadow latitude for creative control once they're downloaded.
Using the E-M5's controls and dialing in custom settings is deceptively easy. The two wheels at the top of the body are the hub of the control center, and they can be set to operate different functions in a host of combinations to suit your shooting preferences. The Movie Record, Fn1 and Fn2 buttons are also configurable to 50 different settings. Once you get it set up to your taste, you won't be missing great shots while fumbling through menus.
Another big plus for this Olympus is its five-axis mechanical image stabilization system. Set to compensate for pitch, yaw, vertical, horizontal and rolling motion, this technology works better than anything else in the category. I found it gave an extra four to five stops to still images in challenging handheld situations. Couple this IS system with the weather-sealed 12-50mm kit lens and the E-M5's impressively fast autofocus system, and you can produce sharp images even relatively low light.
