photo-Olympus Camera
Olympus Camera

Olympus has announced it’s selling its 84-year-old camera business to Japanese JIP.  It’s unknown if JIP will continue to develop and sell cameras using Olympus technology and brand. 

Yesterday’s announcement was not a surprise as it had been rumored for some time.  I view the news with sadness.  I shot film photography with an Olympus SLR OM series camera 45+ years ago, and I currently own a digital OM-D EM-1 MKII kit today, which I’m planning to keep.

So my thought today is, which camera company/business is the next to fold? 

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Monte Stevens
4 years ago

I saw that news and thought of you immediately. We will see what transpires as large corporations manipulate things around in their efforts to make more money. I have always been impressed with the Olympus brand and come close to owning one once. Looks like adding the Sony to you arsenal was a good move. By the way, I like the image!

Mark
4 years ago

That’s a shame. I’ve only had a small P&S Olympus many many years back. The thing was indestructible. I know a lot of people are big fans of their 4/3 products.

Honestly, I wonder how the market can support so many brands, especially with phones now replacing most P&S sales, and likely already eating into others that simply don’t need larger sensors.

Cedric
Cedric
4 years ago

Minolta sold their camera division to Sony and that turned out great for Minolta owners. Maybe the same will happen with Olympus :)

Cedric
Cedric
4 years ago
Reply to  Earl

You make a good point Earl, Sony did manage to get into cameras when competition and interest in camera gear was still climbing. And that is definitely not the case anymore with the emergence of phone cameras. Maybe JIP will surprise the world with something new and cool. Let’s hope. A lack of competition in any field is rarely, if ever, a good thing for end users.

Paul Maxim
Paul Maxim
4 years ago

I think you hit the nail on the head, Earl. The fundamental “problem” is the Micro 4/3 format. The sensor is great so long as you have a reasonable amount of light. As you and I have discussed, I switched to Sony for that reason alone. In low light, there’s no contest. Olympus bad, Sony good. Still, I loved those Olympus lenses. Small, compact, and affordable. I know Olympus owners are hoping that the new company will continue the brand. Well, think Kodak and Polaroid. Ain’t going to happen.

Tom Dills
4 years ago

I agree with your ‘who’s next’ comment, Earl. The problem appears to be a rapidly contracting market for cameras in general, an almost complete decimation of the consumer market by the cellphone plus an over-abundance of choices in the enthusiast/pro space. Like Mark, I’ve only owned an Olympus point & shoot – the very worthy TG series. I’ve long admired their engineering and design and nearly went that route when I replaced my Canon gear. I always tend to side with the underdog and was rather hoping that Olympus and Fujifilm would be the evolutionary favorites. But unfortunately capital and clever marketing can only support sagging sales for so long, and I think that’s what we’ll be seeing over the next few years.