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Portraiture 2
Portraiture 2








In short, if you have the money you can’t go wrong with GFX.įollow Fujiaddict on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTubeįujifilm GFX100S: B&H Photo / Amazon / Moment / Adoramaįujifilm GFX100: B&H Photo / Amazon / Adoramaįujifilm GFX50R: B&H Photo / Amazon / Adoramaįujifilm GFX 50S: B&H Photo / Amazon / Adoramaįujinon GF 110mm F 2 R LM WR: B&H Photo / Amazon / Adoramaįujinon GF80mm f/1.7: B&H Photo / Amazon / Moment / Adoramaįujifilm X-S10: B&H Photo / Amazon / Moment / Adoramaįujinon XF56mm F1.2 R: B&H Photo/ Amazon / Adoramaįujinon XF56mm F1.2 R APD: B&H Photo / Amazon / Adoramaįujinon XF90mm f/2 R LM WR: B&H Photo / Amazon / Adorama What’s interesting is in the above list there is a lot of back and forth, but once you get into the range where price doesn’t matter anymore it always comes back to GFX because there is no better system regardless of price unless you want to deal with large format film, but even then you will be giving up a lot of conveniences. While Chris and Jordan both agreed about the GFX100S and X-S10. All 4 are great lenses, but I prefer the character of the bokeh that the GF80mm and XF90mm produce.Ĭanon, Sony, Panasonic, and Nikon all made the list too, but they received honorable mentions or filled out the middle ground and were sometimes paired with third-party Sigma glass. I think I personally would go with the XF90mm f/2 and GF80mm f/1.7 myself, which is funny because in a way the XF90mm f/2 is more comparable to the clinical nature of the GF110mm f/2 while the GF80mm f/1.7 is more comparable to the XF56mm f/1.2’s character. Fujifilm has a lot of great portraiture lenses so it is no surprise that DPRTV picked the Fujifilm X-S10 with XF56mm f/1.2 as being one of the best budge portraiture options on the market alongside the Fujifilm GFX100S with GF110mm f/2 as the premium portrait solution.










Portraiture 2