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Olympus VF-1 Optical Viewfinder for use with Olympus PEN E-P1 Micro Four Thirds Digital Camera
 
Manufacturer: Olympus
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List Price: $99.99
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Product Description

Optical Viewfinder for use with the 17mm pancake lens. This externally attached optical viewfinder supports shooting with the pancake lens. It uses a bright 17mm frame to enable comfortable pictures composition.

Product Details

  • Optical viewfinder for use with the 17mm pancake lens VF-1

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Customer Reviews

Retro-styled optical finder for the PEN E-P1 with 17mm "pancake" lens
 
Review Date: September 18, 2009
Reviewer: Michael A. Duvernois, Minneapolis, MN United States
This accessory optical finder mounts on the Olympus PEN E-P1 retro-styled (and retro-marketed, "Olympus PEN Since 1959") camera specifically for use with the thin "pancake" 17mm lens. With the fast optical finder and that wide-angle lens, the camera evokes memories of rangefinder cameras, perhaps Leicas and Canons of the 1950s and 1960s. With this setup, I took a bunch of street images, quick clicks of sidewalk scenes. It's an excellent camera, lens, and viewfinder setup. It's especially powerful with digital imagining since only a small fraction of such shots turn out "perfectly" (no fault of the camera, more of the casual picture taking).

If something akin to a 35mm rangefinder, but with modern technology, is of interest to you, you should try it out in the camera store. The whole setup E-P1, 17mm, and this viewfinder are too expensive to buy on a whim, but it is a solid setup with retro appeal but all of the modern features.
Best viewfinder for the E-P1, E-P2 and E-PL1
 
Review Date: May 15, 2010
Reviewer: Richard Drdul, Vancouver, BC
I purchased the VF-1 viewfinder as part of a kit including an E-P1 camera and a 17 mm pancake lens. I wear glasses and have never been able to use a viewfinder (the experience was either like looking through a toilet paper tube, or I couldn't see the whole area of the viewfinder), so I didn't bother using the viewfinder, instead composing photos with the LCD screen.

I recently had the opportunity to try a Voigtlander viewfinder on my camera (lent to me by another photographer couldn't believe that I was taking street photos using the LCD), and was amazed at how well I could see though it. So I dug out my unused Olympus viewfinder, and discovered that (on my E-P1 at least) it's even better than the Voigtlander viewfinder (which costs four times as much!).

First of all, the rectangular bright lines in the VF-1 viewfinder match the 4:3 aspect ratio of the E-P1 sensor. Other viewfinders (like the Voigtlander I borrowed) are intended for use on film cameras and digital cameras with a 3:2 aspect ratio, so the bright lines crop the top and bottom of the image that the E-P1 records, and extend beyond the right and left edges. If you care about accurately framing your image, other viewfinders won't do.

The VF-1 viewfinder has a high "eye point," which means that it works well for someone wearing glasses. I can see the area outside the bright lines without difficulty, which is something I can't say for most other viewfinders (including the ones built into Leica cameras, amazingly enough).

Even if I had an E-P2 camera instead of my E-P1, I would use the VF-1 viewfinder rather than an electronic viewfinder. The optical viewfinder displays an area larger than the image. I can see what is just outside the bright lines, and recompose as necessary. With an electronic viewfinder, all you see is what will be in the image, and nothing more. For my kind of photography (street photography), being able to see an area larger than the image makes a big difference.

In bright light I often have difficulty seeing an image on the LCD screen, and have to shade the screen with my hand while I'm photographing. It's awkward and it looks a bit furtive, which isn't how I want t appear when photographing in the street. The viewfinder, on the other hand, works in all light. I also find that I am faster with the viewfinder than when composing with the LCD screen, and I can move around easier with the camera at my face.

Bottom line: If you have a E-P1, E-P2 or E-PL1 and a 17 mm pancake lens, you owe it to yourself to give the VF-1 viewfinder a test run, even if you wear glasses.
Good value & I prefer it over the digital viewfinder!
 
Review Date: May 24, 2010
Reviewer: Helen, United States
I bought this and returned it as I was told that the Digital viewfinder was so much better and worth paying $250 for.....well, I wish I kept this optical and saved a lot of cash too. I returned the optical and bought the digital and now regret having paid big $$$ for a bulkier viewfinder that basically shows a somewhat pixilated poor image quality that when moving has lag! (quite annoying) I have an e-pL1 and use both the kit lens of 14-42, the 17mm pancake and a zoom lens of 150mm. This optical viewfinder basically will show you your image as if you are looking through a "17mm" lens. If you change lens, then you may find yourself switching between your viewfinder and your LCD for an accurate depiction of what you are seeing. But I actually preferred the quality image with the optical over the digital! And it has a much smaller/neater profile! (just my opinion)
View Finder for Panasonic Lumix GF1.
 
Review Date: July 13, 2010
Reviewer: Sue,
I have been less than pleased with my Lumix GF1 camera. How it ever got "Camera of the Year" I'll never understand. I absolutely loved my old Lumix and if anyone wants thisone for a discount let me know. I got the view finder as I lost so many photo opportunties on a trip that we took to Africa, due to the bright sun, and not being able to see what I was trying to photograph. The Olympus VF-1 Optical Viewfinder did not fit so I'm greatly disappointed again. All in all I thought the camera, lenses and viewfinder were all money thrown away!!!
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