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Suffering zooming issue with Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mk III

Photography Asked on August 15, 2021

Before I start just want to say I am a very new and inexperienced camera user so I appreciate any support. I also want to thank you for your time reading this in advance even if you don’t have an answer.

I am having issues with my new Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mk III. I have coupled this with a Panasonic G Lumix lens (25mm f/1.7 ASPH) that was recommended to me from a friend who does a lot of photography on the side.

The lens works completely fine. I was aiming for a bokeh effect and I love the effect it has. The problem I have however is that even though the camera is about 2 metres from me, the camera is zoomed on my face and I do not have any electronic zoom functions for this camera. There is a setting but this is as far as I have gotten.

Explaining the distance to my friend and since he was the one that recommended me the lens, he said that it should be a lot more zoomed out than it should be. I can barely get my head in the full frame and have to be about 6 metres away to get a full upper body shot.

I am also currently at work and do not have my camera with me. If there’s information missing then it may take me a few hours to reply.

Once again, thank you!

One Answer

Your Olympus is a Micro Four Thirds camera. Without going into all the technical details, this means that the sensor in the camera is smaller than the 'standard' full-frame sensors found in some other cameras. The upshot of this is that your 25mm lens is equivalent to a 50mm lens on a full-frame camera (you double the focal length for Micro Four Thirds to get the equivalent). Could it be possible that your friend is expecting this lens to behave as though it is a full-frame 25mm? For that, you would actually need a 12.5mm lens on your Micro Four Thirds camera!

Not only that, but your 25mm lens is what is known as a prime lens: the focal length is fixed, and you have no zooming capability whatsoever! You will find many answers and blog posts explaining the pros/cons of primes vs zooms, but I will say that I agree with your friend that this is an excellent lens to get started with.

From what you have described, your lens is working exactly as I expect it to. With a prime, if you can't fit something in the frame, then I'm afraid you will have to zoom out using your feet!

As an example, the following shot was taken with the same camera (albeit the Mk II version), and the same lens, from probably about 3m or so away:

enter image description here

Correct answer by Matt Dunn on August 15, 2021

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