Who would have thought how much the image stabilization can improve in just a few years? When Olympus introduced their 5-Axis Image Stabilization in the OM-D E-M5 in 2012, it made huge waves across the photography-sphere. Fast forward a few years later, evolving to the IS in their E-M1 Mark II, now I am able to hand-hold confidently at 4 seconds shutter speed and get blur free images! Do bear in mind that this only works for wide angle shots, shooting subjects from quite a distance away from the camera.
I was conducting a night photography workshop recently and encouraged the Olympus participants to try push their ability to hand-hold long exposure shots with the E-M1 Mark II. Some doubted my claim but when I made them do 4 seconds hand-held shots and they got sharp images, obviously they reached a new level of astonishment!
I am not saying that you no longer need a tripod with such capable image stabilization built into the camera. A tripod is still a necessity, especially if you do a lot of slow shutter speed works and landscapes, nothing can truly replace a sturdy, reliable tripod. However, for frequent travelers and photographers who are always on the move and do not do slow shutter photography so much, carrying one around all the time is a burden. In cases when tripod is not around, having a powerful image stabilization is a life saver.
Oh, and that means I can drink more coffee too.
To E-M1 Mark II owners out there, how many seconds can you confidently hand-hold for your slow shutter speed shots? And how many cups of coffee do you drink per day? I want to know!
4 seconds shutter speed, hand-held. E-M1 Mark II and 12-40mm PRO lens.
Crop from previous image
I was conducting a night photography workshop recently and encouraged the Olympus participants to try push their ability to hand-hold long exposure shots with the E-M1 Mark II. Some doubted my claim but when I made them do 4 seconds hand-held shots and they got sharp images, obviously they reached a new level of astonishment!
I am not saying that you no longer need a tripod with such capable image stabilization built into the camera. A tripod is still a necessity, especially if you do a lot of slow shutter speed works and landscapes, nothing can truly replace a sturdy, reliable tripod. However, for frequent travelers and photographers who are always on the move and do not do slow shutter photography so much, carrying one around all the time is a burden. In cases when tripod is not around, having a powerful image stabilization is a life saver.
Oh, and that means I can drink more coffee too.
To E-M1 Mark II owners out there, how many seconds can you confidently hand-hold for your slow shutter speed shots? And how many cups of coffee do you drink per day? I want to know!
The Image Stabilization Miracle
Reviewed by Unknown
on
February 01, 2018
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