WHILE MIRRORLESS CAMERAS ARE steadily eating into the lower end of the D-SLR market, the professional sector has proved to be a harder nut to crack. There are a couple of reasons for this. The sector is traditionally… well, traditional, and it’s been well and truly dominated by Canon and Nikon for decades. Both are hanging onto their D-SLR businesses like grim death, but the case for the reflex mirror is becoming harder to defend.
Fujifilm was the first to mount a challenge, with the X-Pro1 which, perhaps because it was styled like a rangefinder camera, was too much for some, despite some obvious attractions. Sony’s SLR-styled A7 series and Olympus’s top-end OM-D models have subsequently given mirrorless a big boost among higher-end users – as has Fujifilm’s own X-T1…