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The G. Zuiko 55mm f/1.2 lens is a product of its era, both in terms of design, function, and use. What I mean is that the image performance is limited by the engineering and computational design capabilities of the late-sixties and early seventies. The function is typical of the best manual focus lenses with a long focus throw for precise focusing and a large, pleasing focus ring to hold on to. The use is limited by the intent for this lens to be used on still film cameras. In the article on mir.com.my, Leo Foo asks the reader to look at their portfolio and see how many of their good images were taken on 50-mm-class lenses. Leo makes the claim that only the best photographers can take great photos on standard lenses, a claim I disagree with if for no better reason than that very many of my best photos are taken on standard lenses, including with this lens. So if you’re a photographer who feels intimidated by a standard lens, don’t be. These are good lenses that take nice photos and that replicate the world in a manner fairly true to how we see it. For the G. Zuiko 55mm f/1.2, this is a lens that has significant flaws that owe to the design limitations of its time. Today, images like this lens creates are sought out by many portrait photographers ensconced in the ultra-fast-lens portrait fad. And yes, this is quite a good portrait lens. Sure, yes, it works for that wide-open as many of the portraits in this video show. But it shines the brightest for portraits from f/4 to f/5.6 with your subject, shoulders-up, filling the frame. This lens is at its absolute best when the focus gets racked out almost as far as it will go. So yes, the standard lens class is versatile and highly usable and readily accessible. And if you want to really push it into the obscenely expensive class of standard lenses, honestly, this is the one to look at. I’ve used, now, six or so 1.2 and 1.1 standard lenses and this is the best, besting quite easily the Nikkor and Canon offerings in terms of image quality and subject rendering. The Olympus G. Zuiko 55mm f/1.2 handles beautifully with smooth and appropriately resistive focus, an easy aperture ring, and a substantial size that is easy to grip. The 55mm 1.2 renders portraits beautifully and handles most general-photography subjects well. I think, maybe, that this is the best thing that I can say about this lens. I’m not a fast lens nut. Speed is overrated. This lens, however, stands as an exception to that rule and if you only ever want to try one fast lens, this would be worth trying. Join this channel to get access to perks: / @davidhancock David Hancock's Amazon Author Page with Links to Select Camera Manual eBooks: https://www.amazon.com/David-Hancock/... Video Index: 0:00 - Intro 0:15 - Skip the Intro 2:30 - Olympus G. Zuiko 55mm f/1.2 Specifications 3:23 - Olympus G. Zuiko 55mm f/1.2 Tips & Tricks 6:48 - Olympus G. Zuiko 55mm f/1.2 Lens Diagram & Ray Trace 7:19 - Olympus G. Zuiko 55mm f/1.2 Video Use 10:40 - Olympus G. Zuiko 55mm f/1.2 Strengths & Weaknesses 14:01 - Olympus G. Zuiko 55mm f/1.2 Narrative References: http://www.mir.com.my/rb/photography/... https://lens-db.com/olympus-om-gzuiko... My Instagram: / davidhancock Suffer City Blues" by Suffer City used under active license from Epidemic Sound at the time of this video's upload. "Traveling Lights" by Francis Wells used under active license from Epidemic Sound at the time of this video's upload. "What we Stand For" by Francis Wells used under active license from Epidemic Sound at the time of this video's upload.