I went to a lecture recently and the photographer had taken most of the images on the PEN-F and the results looked, on screen at least, superb. He commented on how nice the camera was to use, and particularly the ability to watch the image 'develop' on the LCD during long exposures, which appeals to me a lot. He did comment that he felt the sensor was 'too small' for high quality exhibition sized prints, and he used something else for that (can't recall what). My brother had a film PEN half frame camera many, many years ago, and I remember it fondly, though he never let me use it!
I went to a lecture recently and the photographer had taken most of the images on the PEN-F and the results looked, on screen at least, superb. He commented on how nice the camera was to use, and particularly the ability to watch the image 'develop' on the LCD during long exposures, which appeals to me a lot. He did comment that he felt the sensor was 'too small' for high quality exhibition sized prints, and he used something else for that (can't recall what). My brother had a film PEN half frame camera many, many years ago, and I remember it fondly, though he never let me use it!
For a beautiful, usaable camera with GREAT lenses, producing very good images that won't be used beyond A3 size, it's one of the best although hugely expensive, considering what the OM 10 does for less than half the price. Good looks cost a lot of money!