Today, at least 400 people were arrested during the Blockupy protests in Frankfurt. But I had to work, and our lunch break isn’t long enough to make it into town and back. The weather was nice and sunny, so I decided to walk “the big round” again, and to take the E-PL1 “Pen” camera with my VF-2 viewfinder and Mitchie’s 20mm Panasonic lens. Without that viewfinder, I probably wouldn’t have bothered, and would have taken one of my (D)SLRs instead.
First I thought ok, if I can’t be at the European Central Bank, let’s at least take a photo of Deutsche Bank, which is opposite of Vodafone in Eschborn, just over the A66 motorway bridge from my employers’:

No protests here of course – and not many workers and employees as well, due to yesterday’s Ascension Day. I cropped this into 16:10 format in post, and also corrected the perspectives a bit. Sometimes I do wish for a view cam, or at least some cool tilt & shift lens. But I probably wouldn’t have carried the former, and not even a tripod for the latter.
Walking further on, and looking up, I suddenly felt small, at least compared to that high current mast towering over the trees, which made even those look small:

Crossing back under that A66 motorway, I took this “street art” graffiti (which is on top of multiple layers of older graffiti; that’s how they do it):

Cropped this into square to fit that symbol a bit better.
On the other (Frankfurt) side of the motorway, I stepped into the fields to take a close-up of this single beauty:

I took this one using a minus 1.3EV correction to avoid blown-out highlights. Using that electronic viewfinder is wonderful, especially with those red and blue over- and underexposure warnings. This is something you really don’t see in an optical viewfinder; with those you have to rely on experience, luck, and/or multiple exposures until you get it right. With that VF-2, you take one shot and just have it. I love that.
On the bridge over the small creek, someone obviously had romantic feelings during last winter:

And when you lift the camera just a bit higher, you see this:

Here I did like they used to say during film days: “Expose for the highlights, develop the shadows” – something I usually don’t do with those digital cameras from Olympus, since you run into noise territory if you overdo it. That newer OM-D E-M5 should handle this nicer, just like any camera with those Sony sensors, it has an advantage of at least 2 stops in dynamic range over my little old “Pen”. But I’m an amateur and hobbyist only, and a result like this is actually quite good – nothing for pixel peepers, but good enough if you want to print something like this. I’ve seen and proved that.
A few steps further on, you come into open fields. Lots of sun, and an ideal place for the farmer who still does some real important work there – growing food for us all. Even in this harsh and direct sunlight, those Pens can do a remarkable job (but without that viewfinder I probably wouldn’t have gone that low with my camera):

And coming back to the company where I work, I caught a colleague who crossed that bridge of which I took photos from inside lately:

And even with this one, I was impressed about what you’re able to get with these small cameras. Nothing was really blown out, and nothing too dark as well – perfect. Love that “Pen”! And that viewfinder is a big big recommendation, at least if you use the camera in sunlight that bright like it was today.
Thanks for viewing and reading.