A couple of years ago I was offered the opportunity to work with Airbnb and its Plus program. I was getting into interior photography seriously and I grabbed it. It was demanding, it gave me the chance to meet good photo editors, it was well paid, there was really no way to say no. The unpleasant part was the gear requirement, working in full frame was a non-negotiable condition. I was so happy with the equipment I had. After starting my path at Fujifilm in 2014, I had everything I needed at the time and it was with sadness that I was forced to follow another path. So I did. That same week the Sony A7III was coming out and I went on that adventure. It was that or Nikon, but I couldn't imagine getting into the bulky dslr world again. I certainly didn't want to go back to Canon.
Everything went as planned, work, learning and a year later I embraced the quality that the Sony system had to offer. Good lenses, incomparable AF and I started to build my path again from 16mm to 85mm, which do 95% of my work. At some point I even considered selling my xpro2, a camera that always accompanies me with that wonderful 35mm f1.4. I did not make it. Especially because of the 35mm, which I bought, sold and later bought again, coincidentally to the same person. I never did the complete conversion and, especially in my author's work, it was rare to turn to Sony. Why? It is irrational, I know, and I even forced myself, but everything seemed clinical, inorganic, it lacked something that never allowed me to truly enjoy it.
In late 2019, Airbnb canceled the program. Then 2020 arrived (little more need to be said) and I found myself, again, thinking about what to do with the equipment, as I certainly didn't feel any need to maintain two systems. It was a very difficult decision, as I fully recognize the quality of that A7 III, that AF system capable of completely changing the way we photograph, a full frame sensor that is difficult to let go and some of the sharpest lenses I've ever seen. Still, I sold everything and resumed my journey back home. These days everyone I know wants Sony. I even understand why, but the truth is that I went in the opposite direction. The xt4 arrived two weeks ago and I managed to rebuild almost everything I had, albeit with some variations I already planned in 2017. I opted for 9mm instead of 10-24 and 90mm instead of 50-140mm. Zoom only the versatile 18-55mm, which is always good to have in your backpack. I'm happy, 9mm, 23mm, 35mm and 90mm, and maybe one day I'll get back to the 56, but certainly not for now. I no longer have to hear that terrible Sony shutter, which looked like an assault weapon in any quiet environment. I no longer have to go through those unbelievable menus, which made any unpredictable change a nightmare. I can also store the cleaning kit. The Sony sensor, even with all the care in the world, is a true 'dust magnet'. Most important of all, I can return to the pleasure of changing the diaphragm on the lenses, something that tortured me on the A7 in any session. I know that there are those who prefer those slices and I also know that there are Sony lenses with these characteristics (they cost a kidney or a lung, but there are, it is true), but it is not for me. I am now like the old man on the highway driving the wrong way, everyone wants full frame, everyone wants Alphas, I just want to feel at home. And I feel it. That's what the Fujifilm system is for me. It is not exactly a love story, but the truth is that although most cameras are great, they shouldn't feel like a foreign element in your photography. I don't make any more promises, I don't know if tomorrow I'll need to go another way again, but as long as I can choose, I know where I want to be. And I don't need much more.












