Global mirrorless camera sales were up 16.5 percent this year, while DSLR sales were down 15 percent. Yet Canon has just one line of mirrorless camera to its name, the Canon EOS M series, and it's done a poor job of cultivating these cameras since their inception in 2012. (For instance, the company has somehow only afforded them a very meager lens lineup for the M series, even though Canon's DSLR lens system is reputable and vast.) Canon has largely missed another recent trend, too, which is the application of retro film camera stylings on modern camera bodies.
Companies like Fujifilm and Olympus have owned this style in the last few years, releasing top quality digital mirrorless cameras that — thanks to brushed metal finishes, metal knobs, and rubber grips — are also easily mistaken for their film camera progenitors.
The Olympus PEN E-P5 has a 16.1-megapixel Live MOS sensor (such as the OM-D EM-5), the TruePic VI processor and a convenient touch-capacitive-adjustable (tilt) 3 "and 1037k points. The machine is equipped with an image stabilization system operating on a 5-axis that makes us earn up to five stop, it has an external electronic viewfinder and the shutter speed is 1/8000 seconds.
Like all cameras of the new generation has integrated Wi-Fi and the ability to record video in Full HD (1920 x 1080), in this case there is also the option of recording time-lapse movies in AVI Motion JPEG 1280 x 720 at 10fps.
It should be also improved autofocus system since there is no function High-speed AF that promises important new features compared to previous models, such as the E-M5. The sensitivity ranges from 100 to 25600 ISO. Among the most interesting features is the possibility of shooting in RAW + JPEG and gusts up to 9 frames per second. The machine is equipped with a small flash, as you can see in the photo, is located in the upper left.