Hmmm, that's weird...all those Fujifilm films are still available in Canada as far as I know, the local camera stores are all well stocked with them, though like Velvia, at rather exhorbitant prices. There seems to be an unwritten rule where colour slide film must sell for at least $15 per roll unless it's about to expire.
Anyway, we went camera shopping today so we could handle various micro 4/3 and other mirrorless large sensor cameras. Just for fun we brought along our Olympus Pen-FT to see how the new digital offerings compare against the RealRaw
TM classic. In a word, plasticky, the Pen E-P2 looks nice enough but feels like a cheap toy next to the original and the GF1 is even worse. And they have too many buttons & menus. The Sony NEX cameras were a disaster, it felt like I was holding a toy camera and the controls were convoluted and unusable. It's really thin & small which is nice but the lens is huge and the aesthetics are horrible. We both agreed the design team was on crack.
On a brighter note the Samsung offerings were quite nice, particularly the new
NX100, this camera was a joy to use with its simple buttons & control dials for everything. There's dial on top for shutter speed and one on the back for aperture, spin'em till the exposure needle in the screen is good and that's it, it's so easy. But it's really plasticky. And my husband as usual lamented the lack of an optical viewfinder.
Which brings us to the Leica M9, no there's no way we're going to buy one but the store had one they were willing to let us handle so why not? At last, a camera that feels like a camera, with a real viewfinder so everyone's happy. It feels like a classic camera, but better, and everything is really simple & easy to use. I can definitely see where the Leica faithful are coming from when they preach the superiority of the M-system. But it costs more than my car. The camera with a couple lenses would pay my rent for a year, that's just silly.