New Orleans for Fun, Photos and Ghosts with Olympus TG-3 and E-M10!

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New Orleans for Fun, Photos and Ghosts with Olympus TG-3 and E-M10

Wow, finally I am at home relaxing in my Pajamas and with cup of coffee in hand I am feeling blessed in all aspects in my life. From happiness, to love, to living a stress free happy life.  I am wondering how in the hell I managed to end up so happy in life, so at peace, so fulfilled. In any case, it feels good to be back home after traveling for the past 11 days or so. For the past three days I was in beautiful and spooky New Orleans with Olympus camera and a few other bloggers. Why were we there? Well, it was a press trip to allow certain websites to test out the new Tough TG-3 camera as well as the E-M10, the mini E-M5 which is absolutely FANTASTIC! I reviewed it a little while ago HERE but I loved it just as much as I loved the E-M5 and E-M1. For the cost, it is quite amazing in its capabilities and equals the E-M5 and E-M1 in IQ, without question. For under $800 you get the E-M10 and Lens. Great buy. 

So after visiting my Mom for a week over Mothers Day I came home for one night and flew out to New Orleans for this trip that was to be jammed packed from morning until night. Going on a late night Ghost Walk, touring the beautiful Oak Alley Plantation, taking an almost two hour long Swamp tour to staying right in the heart of the French Quarter and hitting some famous pubs, bars and restaurants we sure did get a chance to see as much as we could in those 2 1/2 days. I have always wanted to see New Orleans as it is filled with a rich and sometimes tragic history. It seems like a place we should all see at least once in life.

At the Oak Valley Plantation shot with the E-M10 and the awesome 12-40 2.8 Pro Zoom

When I arrived to the W Hotel in the French Quarter I was boon away as it was smack dab in the middle of the quarter and with all of the rich history I was looking forward to just hanging out and shooting some images. But within 5 minutes of arriving I had to change and head down to the lobby to meet the group for dinner. As we took the walk to dinner it was a sensory overload with all of the people, the bars, the strip clubs, and all of the debauchery that the French Quarter is known for.

Shot with the E-M10 and 25 1.8 while heading to dinner on night #1

After some amazing food was into our belly we headed to a walking Ghost Tour that net up a local haunted bar. This was to be a 90 minute walking tour of the French Quarter at night while we were told ghost stories about the history of the area. Was good fun and we made sure to get a beer or two before the walk. The tour was not scary at all but more educational. Wether the stories were real or not I do know but it was fun to walk the city at night.

The Ghost Tour was led by this woman who was full of knowledge about the legends and ghost stories of the French Quarter. E-M10, 25 1.8 using grainy B&W

Next Up…

We ended up at a Karaoke Bar where we watched some fun to watch but horrible singers as we enjoyed a few drinks. I shot a few with the E-M10 in grainy B&W mode which adds massive grain but allows use of super high ISO without worry as you expect the noise 😉 resembles grainy old film in many ways.

E-M10 at the Karaoke Club but I shot the crowd below who was really enjoying the show.

Mr. Chris Gampat from the Phoblographer was there as well as freelancer Laura Hicks. 25 1.8 in darkness and grainy B&W mode. Not sharp due to motion blur but captures the moment.

A club nearby had a live band and I grabbed this shot through the street window with the 25 1.8

Two of the wonderful ladies who are with Olympus. They made sure we all had a great time while using their latest cameras. E-M10 and 25 1.8 in Grainy B&W.

Lots of music in the French Quarter!

With night# 1 wrapped up I was back in my room for some much-needed sleep.

Trying out the Tough TG-3 on Day 2 at the Oak Alley Plantation

At 6AM the alarm woke me and I prepared for the day by getting ready, answering some e-mails and eating a good breakfast. This was the day of more tours and it started out with a bus ride to Oak Alley Plantation which was gorgeous of course. The weather was in the 70’s with some sun and I could not have asked for better. We learned about the history of the plantation and was able to snap some shots. This was the day I also was able to test out the new Olympus Tough TG-3.  I have never tested the TG1 or TG2 because I was never interested in an all-weather point and shoot. After using the new TG3 for two days I went to Amazon to pre-order one. At $349 it is a crazy steal of a deal and will take all kinds of abuse being shockproof, weatherproof and waterproof to 50 feet. It has high def video, slow motion high-speed video and a very cool Microscope mode that is unlike any macro I have ever tried. At $349, this guy is a must own for anyone who needs a good all around TOUGH camera to survive the elements around them. While not the last word in image quality it is very good for what it is, a small sensor P&S built into an indestructible body.

With the Ring Light, which is a must own for this camera! Snaps on and off easily and works GREAT!

You can pre-order the TG-3 HERE at Amazon. Ships in 3 weeks or so according to Olympus. $349. They also sell a wide-angle converter, a tele converter and the coolest ring light I have ever seen for around $40 that makes the Microscope mode work unbelievable well.

Here are a few shots I snapped with the TG-3 tough while at the plantation and the swamp tour:

You can see the reflection of the ring light in her eye while in Microscope Mode. I could have gotten closer but did not want to touch her eye!

On the Swamp Boat Tour…behind me..

and seeing some gators up close…

At one point I dubbed the Tough into the swamp as an alligator came for it. A couple of us tried this and I shot some video but the camera was sideways so the video is not very good. Still, the Tough captured HD video while dunked in a nasty swamp!

Below: Microscope mode as  the camera and light were set on top of my ring…

…and here I literally laid the camera down on my hand – yes, the lens rested on my hand and still focused – Microscope mode. Looks like I need to moisturize! Damn. 

Overall my 1st impression of the TOUGH TG-3 was amazing. Fantastic! The $349 body is well worth it for those who want a take anywhere all-weather all activity camera. Add in the ring light for under $50 and the Wide angle lens for around $109 and you have a pretty capable little system that will withstand drops, kicks, water, snow, ice and anything you throw at it. Microscope mode takes it over the top and is easily accessible with the dial. Just turn it to the little image of the Microscope.

The Tough is one tough cookie. I even dunked it in a Lilly pond and when I took it out this was the image I snapped:

After this I dried it off and it was performing just as it was before. No damage to the camera, lens, internals or memory card.

But back to the Plantation and Samp tour. I also shot with the E-M10 and 25 1.8 and 75 1.8 while there and came away with some great quality shots. Keep in mind, all of these shots are OOC JPEGS. No RAW. Olympus can pull of JPEG very well and the E-M10 is no exception.

Here are some shots with the E-M10 and various lenses:

The E-M10 and 12-40 Zoom at 2.8

The E-M10 and 75 1.8 wide open, natural light. 

Some behind the scenes antics..

On the boat I shot the other boat with the 2nd half of our group with the 75 1.8

The eyeball of my new friend, Mr Alex McClure, an Olympus trailblazer and amazing photographer based in Phoenix AZ. Shot with the E-M10 and Voigtlander 17.5 at 0.95!

More fun with the E-M10 and 75 1.8…

The final night..

After the tours we were able to get to the hotel and freshen up before dinner and another night out in the French Quarter. On the way to dinner I took along the E-M10 and my 20 1.7 II and shot a coupe of snaps along the way in Grainy B&W mode..

I had a blast in New Orleans but the only problem is I did not have any personal time to explore. That means I must go back soon for a few days to see all that it has to offer. Just the little taste I had of the sights, sounds and food all told me it is a special place. I highly recommend the E-M10, as I did in my full review of the camera HERE. The new TG-3 is one hell of a camera as well and priced right. You can order that TG-3 HERE. The ring light is HERE.

So I thank Olympus and all of those who were there along for the ride. Was a great time of fun, friends and shooting!

Steve

34 Comments

  1. Hi Steve,

    Firstly, thank you for the wonderful article! I own the TG 3 and love it, especially for snorkeling and underwater photos. That being said, Im looking to purchase either the fish eye lens or the telephoto lens. Do you have any suggestions as to which is more useful/more versatile?

  2. Hi Steve, love your B/W shots using EM-10, seems very old B/W images like haunted out of it.
    Had couple question here, Which one do you go, Ep 5 or EM-10? How the AF of EM-10 in the dark? thanks

  3. Steve, I’m looking at the EM1 camera, do you have a review of the 12-40 2.8 Olympus lens? Is is as good as my local shop says that it is? I’m coming from a canon eos 50d with a 24-105L as my main lens, with a few primes as necessary

  4. Hey Steve hope you’re still monitoring this tread, what’s your take on the EM10 vs GX7 particularly in color rendition and handling? I am considering pulling a trigger on one on these.

    • Well, I have more fun using the E-M10 and feel it has the better output and is the better camera but I do recommend the accessory grip with it as it is a little on the small side. The E-M10 is FANTASTIC.

      • Thank you for your reply buddy, I value you opinion highly, keep up the good work. It was refreshing seeing your Mom again (I think it was a Facebook post) she used to be a regular on the old site. Take Care!

    • Well, different cameras. The Nikon is an interchangeable lens camera that costs much more for that capability. Has a larger sensor as well. The TG-3 is smaller, slimmer, more versatile and much cheaper.

  5. I read somewhere that the TG3 has also an automatic focus stacking mode which sounds quite interesting. I’m wondering if we’ll see this one day in the OM-D cameras as well.

  6. great article steve. those grainy b&w shots are, for lack of a better word, very pleasing to the eyes. not sure why exactly. it’s not super clean or anything but it works for me aesthetically.

  7. Steve, how do you post process your photos (em10 with 12 – 40 and 75 1.8 people shots)? Please share and don’t hold back : ) I love them

    • Well, these are all JPEGS, mostly all just OOC transferred to my phone using the WiFi feature, emailed to myself and then uploaded to the site. One or two had some contrast enhancement or filter applied. The portrait of the man with the hat had an Alien Skin B&W filter applied. The grainy B&W are using the in camera filter. But all were JPEG’s. Not one RAW images here.

        • Do you have a certain image in mind? Many were different. Some were Vivid, some were Natural, some were Mono. I just set it depending on where I am. The grainy B&W was just the Grainy B&W filter in camera.

  8. Great, inspirational article Steve! I was wondering, how fast is the focusing speed of the 20 1.7 on the em10?

    • It was OK, not as fast as the Olympus 17 1.8 or 25 1.8. Same as it is on the Panasonic GX7 it seemed. The 20 1.7 II is not a fast focusing lens but it is a great lens regardless.

  9. Refreshing to see for once a “not another X-T1 or A7R” review. I’m very surprised by the grain in those B/W pictures… which is extremely resembling what you would get in film with high iso-film. Olympus is clearly also getting an extremely mature MLIC system.

  10. That was a great read – makes me want to visit.

    Some really engaging shots too that make me want to look at Olympus a little harder too.

  11. Hi Steve

    I love your pictures and the joy you live your life with your Family. Thanks a lot for sharing with us – that is really inspiration!

  12. Damn Steve…I already got the EM10 because of you now this new TG3 looks like another must after I saw what you could do with it. I was saving up for the 12-40!

  13. macro shots are very impressive. Had no idea they were this much capable. Impressed, indeed.

    • Macro Zoom on the Panasonic LF1 is probably as good and the smart thing is it is a zoom macro so you don’t cast a shadow. Not much good under water though! LOL!

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