Fujifilm's X-H1 camera displaces the 19-month old X-T2 as the flagship model in the range. Many features from the X-T2 carry over to the X-H1, including the 24.3-megapixel X-Trans CMOS III sensor and X-Processor Pro processing chip.
Fujifilm's X-H1 camera displaces the 19-month old X-T2 as the flagship model in the range. Many features from the X-T2 carry over to the X-H1, including the 24.3-megapixel X-Trans CMOS III sensor and X-Processor Pro processing chip.
The Fujifilm X-H1 is a new flagship compact system camera sitting at the top of the Fujifilm range above the X-T2 and X-Pro2 models. The XH1 is the first ever Fujifilm camera to feature in-body image stabilization (IBIS), which offers a maximum of 5.5 stops of compensation depending on the lens that...
"Ultimately, Fuji has here crafted a wonderful all-rounder that masters almost any situation and could easily last you for years."
One word, IBIS - it's truly effective and alone worth upgrading to from the XT2. Yes, it's heavier but the new grip makes the added weight a non-factor.
The addition of in-camera stabilization will make the X-H1 immediately attractive to X-system photographers, even those who aren't necessarily likely to make much use of its video features.
Someone looking for a video/stills all-rounder
Anyone looking for the perfect tool for one specific job
For months there's been talk of a new high-end mirrorless camera arriving from Fujifilm. Speculative chat seemed to suggest that the next model might be called the X-T2S – a pimped-up version of the X-T2, possibly with a few exciting features to entice existing X-series users and those tempted to...
Benefits from In Body Image Stabilisation (IBIS; Introduces Flicker Reduction mode; Supports excellent power booster grip (VPB-XH1; Improved electronic viewfinder (OVF/EVF
Camera battery can't be charged via booster; Small AF-ON AE-L buttons on VPB-XH1; Doesn't feature 4:2:2 10-bit video; No USB-Type C interface
There's no question that the X-H1 is Fujifilm's most advanced X Series camera to date, thanks to a range of new and refined features. These include the arrival of IBIS, a brilliant high-resolution EVF, advanced 4K video capture, touchscreen control, and an all-round tougher build.
In-body image stabilization; Brilliant viewfinder; Touchscreen control; DCI 4K video; Dedicated AF-On button
Fiddly exposure compensation control; Performance hasn't moved on from X-T2; Larger design won't appeal to everyone; Battery performance could be better
The Fujifilm X-H1 is the most capable model in the mirrorless X-series to date, taking the core control, speed and quality of the popular X-T2 and upgrading it with a tougher shell, deeper grip, touchscreen, improved movie features, a more detailed viewfinder, Bluetooth connectivity and most...
The Fujifilm X-H1 delivers the same class-leading image quality as the X-T2, but betters its focus system, offering stronger peformance in dim light and when shooting video. You also get Fujifilm's excellent Film Simulation modes for shooting in JPG, and Raw support for photographers who prefer to...
Shoots at 8fps with mechanical shutter and 14fps with electronic shutter; 5-axis sensor stabilization; 24MP APS-C sensor; 200Mbps 4K video; Log video profile; Tilting rear LCD; Dual card slots; Monochrome information LCD; Weather-sealed body
Expensive; Not a true vari-angle LCD; No EV dial; Add-on grip required for top performance; No built-in flash; Omits headphone jack; Video recording chews through batteries
The Fujifilm X-H1 takes a proven 24 megapixels X-Trans CMOS III sensor and fits it on a state-of-the-art 5-axis image-stabilization mechanism. While it falls short of the 5½ stops claimed in specifications, it delivers a solid 2½ stops of improvement over hand-holding any other Fujifilm mirrorless.
Very low image noise up to ISO 3200; Wide dynamic-range; Reliable metering; Natural rendition of image colors; Excellent automatic white-balance; Instant shutter-lag with virtually no blackout; Fluid ultra-sharp EVF; Continuous AF at 14 FPS; Plenty of direct controls; Instant video response,...
Occasional autofocus misses; Limited stabilization; Not Exposure-Priority; Incorrect histogram in Live-View; Complicated Shutter-Speed control; Stacked dials move too easily; Slow shot-to-shot speed; Very short battery-life; Quite bulky; Pricey; Soft aperture detents With all current XF-mount lenses
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