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Reviews of Olympus OM-D E-M5

Testseek.com have collected 169 expert reviews of the Olympus OM-D E-M5 and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Olympus OM-D E-M5.
Award: Most Awarded April 2012
April 2012
 
(85%)
169 Reviews
Users
(92%)
164 Reviews
85 0 100 169

The editors liked

  • Very good photo quality (though best results are achieved by shooting RAW)
  • Wellbuilt
  • Weathersealed metal body with a retro flair
  • Fiveaxis
  • Sensorshift image stabilization system
  • Beautiful 3inch articulating touchscreen OLED display with 610
  • 000 pixels
  • Plus a large and sharp EVF
  • Full manual controls
  • With lots of white balance options
  • Five kinds of bracketing
  • Realtime tone curve adjustment
  • A cute little camera that's packed with features and offers excellent image quality
  • Appealing body design
  • Smaller camera is easy to hold and quite small
  • Battery grip makes the E-M5 feel like a tiny professional camera
  • EVF works well
  • Tilting OLED touchpanel display
  • Water resistant body
  • Advanced in-body image stabilization
  • Excell...
  • A dust-and-weather-sealed design distinguishes the Olympus OM-D E-M5 from the rest of the interchangeable-lens crowd
  • And its class-leading performance doesn't hurt
  • Either. Plus
  • It's got an interesting
  • Relatively streamlined shooting design
  • Excellent image quality
  • Very good metering
  • Reliable Automatic WhiteBalance
  • Superb builtin stabilization
  • Virtually no shutterlag
  • Fast contrastdetect AF
  • Good shottoshot speed
  • Very responsive
  • Excellent automatic Manual Focus Assist
  • Unique LiveBulb m
  • Outstanding image quality
  • * Highly customizable feature set
  • * Compact design
  • * Wide selection of accessories and lenses
  • * Weather resistant body
  • * Art Filters add fun factor
  • * Good macro mode on 12-50mm zoom
  • * Fast autofocus and burst mode
  • Good images and video
  • DSLRlike feature set
  • Compact
  • Stylish form factor
  • Compact body. Fully weather sealed. Crisp LCD EVF. Articulating rear display. Sharp kit lens. Impressive high ISO performance. Fast autofocus. Shoots at 9 frames per second. In-body stabilization. Large native lens library. Optional grip available.
  • Go Back to Top. Skip To
  • Start of Article
  • Cameras
  • Digital cameras
  • Micro Four Thirds
  • Mirrorless Cameras
  • Olympus
  • Top3
  • Excellent image and video quality
  • Blistering performance
  • Extremely attractive
  • Great battery life
  • Superior image quality
  • Even in low light
  • You can really push ISO without sacrificing resolution
  • Durability
  • Very powerful auto-focus and image stabilization technology
  • Very good image quality
  • Even at high ISO
  • Bright
  • Punchy JPEGs make the most of camera's capability
  • Very fast autofocus with most Micro Four Thirds lenses
  • Weather-sealed body
  • Built-in image stabilization helps increase number of sharp shots (in single-frame mode)
  • Good level of direct control despite small body
  • Tilting OLED screen very good
  • Large amount of control over image parameters
  • A
  • Incredibly fast autofocus5-axis image stabilizationManual/auto-zoom kit lens
  • Tough weather-sealed build quality
  • Outstanding High ISO noise performance
  • Great quality viewfinder and tilting OLED touch-screen
  • 5-axis image stabilisation which works with any lens
  • 2
  • 3
  • 5 and 7-frame auto bracketing.
  • Lovely design
  • Premium build
  • Solid performance and great images

The editors didn't like

  • Occasional underexposure and highlight clipping
  • Tiny
  • Cluttered button layout makes it way too easy to accidentally press the wrong one
  • OLED display difficult to see outdoors
  • AF system tends to "hunt" when recording movies
  • "Hiss" from IS system may bother some folks
  • No builtin flash (though included external flash is pretty good)
  • Movies cannot be edited incamera
  • Full manual on CDROM
  • Just never felt comfortable shooting with it
  • Price
  • $999 (body only
  • In black or silver)
  • $1
  • 299 (black or silver body with black M.ZUIKO Digital ED 1250 mm f3.56.3 EZ lens)
  • Www.olympusamerica.com
  • Odd power switch location
  • Exposure compensation dial changes easily
  • Can't be turned off
  • Small buttons
  • EVF proximity sensor sometimes activates unexpectedly
  • Moderately high chromatic aberration from 12-50mm kit lens
  • No in-camera chromatic aberrati...
  • The photo quality is solid
  • But not outstanding
  • Especially if you shoot only JPEG
  • Poor color accuracy
  • Lowcontrast EVF
  • Not always ExposurePriority and frequently wrong LiveHistogram
  • Modal ExposureCompensation
  • Some tiny buttons
  • Uncomfortable eyelets
  • Poorly placed tripod mount
  • Low battery life
  • Rear controldial uncomfortably high
  • Menu system can be daunting
  • * No built-in mic adapter
  • * Small buttons can be difficult for large fingers
  • * Soft humming noise when powered up
  • Price when rated
  • $1000 (body only)
  • $1300 with 12-50mm 1
  • 3.5-6.3 zoom lens
  • Costly bodyonly configuration
  • Grip and lenses add expense
  • A 2x crop factor doesn't lend itself to wide angle shooting
  • External flash. Lacks a standard mic input
  • No builtin popup flash. Can't change exposure settings while shooting video. Shallow eye cup diminishes the EVF's effectiveness in bright outdoor situations
  • Expensive for a Micro Four Thirds camera
  • Smaller sensor than most $1
  • 000-plus cameras
  • Button design
  • No pop-up flash – accessory only
  • There can be some in-camera digging before you get your customized settings up and running
  • Focus tracking distinctly unreliable
  • Image stabilization not effective for continuous shooting
  • Small controls sometimes awkward (especially with cold/gloved hands)
  • No in-camera correction of CA (which can be problematic with 12-50mm kit zoom)
  • Default JPEG settings a bit keen to blur detail away
  • Several useful features hidden in obscure and confusingly-named menu options
  • Otherwise useful H
  • ExpensiveBattery meter issues at launchPoor focus accuracy in low-contrast scenes
  • Screen only tilts and there's no touch functions in movie modes
  • Distracting whirring noise from stabilisation motor
  • No built-in mic socket
  • Flash unit clips-on rather then being built-in
  • Continuous AF not as consistent as a phase-detect system.
  • Base ISO of 100 would be welcome

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Reviews

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  Published: 2012-05-01, Author: Gavin , review by: T3.com

  • Solid build and retro style, Angle-adjustable OLED, Integral viewfinder
  • Backplate buttons are tiny

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(80%)
 
  Published: 2012-04-19, review by: practicalphotography.com

  • Abstract:  With an old-school appearance and a few new creative functions, is this the classic camera with digital punch Olympus users have been waiting for? We test the pre-production Olympus OM-D on a trip to Amsterdam....

 
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  Published: 2012-04-17, review by: digitalversus.com

  • Weatherproof finish (and weatherproof 1250 mm lens), Great retro design, Picture quality up to 3200 ISO, Two settings dials, Effective stabilisation system, Sharp, smooth EVF, Tilt LCD touchscreen, Quiet shutter release
  • No builtin flash (separate accessory supplied), Battery life could be better, Menus can be confusing, Handling room for improvement, No headphones or mic sockets for video, 3D AF tracking isn't always reliable, No GPS, no WiFi
  • The Olympus OM-D E-M5 is the best high-end micro four-thirds camera in the current Olympus range. It's fast, it takes great-quality pictures, it has a good EVF, a handy tilt LCD and an effective built-in stabilisation system. In fact, it's the best Oly...

 
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(80%)
 
  Published: 2012-04-13, Author: Amy , review by: techradar.com

  • Excellent viewfinder, Tilting touchscreen, Customisable dials and buttons, High image quality at low ISOs, New art filters
  • Plastic unresponsive buttons, No in, built flash, Odd (sound) emitted
  • The Olympus OM-D is of course an expensive proposition, at £1,149 for the single lens kit or £999 body-only, but when you consider all of the improvements that have been made, we think the extra expense when compared with an E-P3 is just about worth it. ...

 
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(80%)
 
  Published: 2012-04-07, Author: Tony , review by: amateurphotographer.co.uk

  • I consider the styling and build quality of the OM-D E-M5 as being equal to the best compact system cameras around, especially with the grip and battery pack attached. Also, by using the micro four thirds to OM mount adapter, old OM lenses can find a new...

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(80%)
 
  Published: 2012-02-24, Author: Audley , review by: trustedreviews.com

  • Super-fast AF and excellent image quality, Lots of features and user customisation, Easy to use and solid build quality, Good quality EVF and tiltable screen
  • Neck strap can get in the way, Plastic buttons feel a bit cheap
  • Olympus has long championed the cause of small, portable DSLR-like cameras (think back to the E-420, which at the time of its launch was the smallest DSLR on the market) and the E-M5 is very much an extension of that philosophy. Overall build quality is v...

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(90%)
 
  Published: 2012-10-09, review by: techsmart.co.za

  • Abstract:  Sometimes you come across a camera that makes photography simple. Olympus’ OM-D E-M5 is one such beast. Granted, its battery life is not that great, and yes, its buttons are so small you would think it was designed for five year olds, but once set up, ...

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  Published: 2014-12-18, Author: Michael , review by: gizmodo.in

  • Abstract:  If you have kids, the impulse to document every instant of their waking lives is nearly as powerful as the impulse to feed and shelter them. I'll help you find the perfect camera to freeze those priceless moments.If you're reading this article, you've pro...

 
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  Published: 2012-12-11, Author: Sharon , review by: exhibit.tech

  • If you are the kind of discerning photographer who wants his or her camera to look the part, the OM-D E-M5 wins hands down. Although we had got the black bodied E-M5, there is one with a silver body, which looks like a compact version of the older generat...

 
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(80%)
 
  Published: 2012-06-29, Author: Techmagnifier , review by: techmagnifier.com

  • It has a compact body and is fully weather sealed, Crisp LCD EVF, Articulating rear display, Sharp kit lens, Very good image quality, even at high ISO, Good level of direct control despite small body, Fast autofocus, Bright, punchy JPEGs make the most of
  • External flash, Lacks a standard mic input, Focus tracking distinctly unreliable, Several useful features hidden in obscure and confusinglynamed menu options, No warning given that focus is locked during highspeed shooting
  • The Olympus OM-D E-M5 Review shows that it is the most accomplished DSLR styled compact camera you have ever used. This camera vies for the position as the topmost mirror-less Micro Four Thirds camera. It is, without the question, one of the best cameras ...

 
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(80%)
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