5 Frames with a Fuji X-Half

By thorsten

After writing about the adventures of Henri Cartier-Bresson (Hyères) and Robert Capa (Omaha Beach) before, this Fujifim X-Half exploit is encompassed by both of them.

Fujifilm kindly lent me an X-Half, perfectly sized for travelling in this summers first heatwave. The X-Half, my first foray into half-frame photography, is a tiny camera introducing two new modes of control. First there is the frame advance lever, used for composing two shots in sequence next to each other in what Fujifilm calls 2-in-1 Shooting. A nice touch, I would like a lever like that with programmable functions on the next X-Pro. And while the other new Fuji, the X-E5, comes with a dedicated Film Simulation wheel, the X-Half sports a small touch display where the film used to sit, and some analog cameras had a window showing you the roll. You swipe up and down, changing the film. That is fun and worked really well for me. Most of the time I switched between Velvia and Acros. The images here are all black and white Acros, unedited out of the camera. I used ISO 400, like I would with a roll of film, and the cameras aperture priority exposure mode. The X-Half creates 3648 × 4864 pixel sized images with the 10.8 mm lens (which would be 32 mm on a full frame). Shooting portrait, not landscape, comes natural to the X-Half. That is the way I shot her, and combined images with the 2-in-1 method for landscape.

Cartier-Bresson and Matisse

After his third, succesful attempt, Henri Cartier-Bresson escaped from a german labor camp in 1943. Early 1944 saw him working again, on a series of artist portraits called Visages d’aujourd’hui. On February 15, 1944, HCB visited Vence in the south of France. Here lived Henri Matisse in the Villa Le Rêve. While I stayed im Grasse in July 2025 I drove over to Vence and had a look with the X-Half. It was about Fahrenheit 95, and any camera bigger than the tiny Fuji would have been a burden.

I imagined Matisse, who later created the cover illustration for Cartier-Bressons Images à la Sauvette, first published in 1952, to wave the photographer good bye from the door of Le Rêve, listening to the cicadas song.

Antibes

While in Grasse, I drove down to the beach in Antibes, next to Cannes. The X-Half is a unobtrusive tool, with an inaudible shutter. You will not disturb your surroundings, or draw attention while taking pictures.

A kiss at Cap Antibes, where Helmut Newton liked to roam…
led to another part of the beach, where the symmetry between the gentleman in the foreground and the lady in front of the wave attracted me…
and this elegant delivery of Pizzas in the heat of the afternoon.

Turned out, the X-Half is a highly versatile, and capable camera for images on the fly.

Capa in Nuremberg

In April 1945 Robert Capa visited Nuremberg. His driver, Private Hubert Strickland, climbed up on a podestal on the Zeppelinhaupttribüne from which Hitler liked to address the crowds. The image with Huberts mock salute graced the cover of LIFE from May 14, 1945. The war in Europe was over. The swastika on top of the wall was blown to bits later, and today these grandstands are in disrepair, even skateboarding is forbidden. The Zeppelinhaupttribüne, based on the Pergamon Altar, is fenced in, and Private Strickland was absent. So, like with the house of Matisse, I shot an empty building, combining two images into one.

The Reichsparteitag field in Nuremberg, like the Tempelhof airport around the corner from where I live in Berlin, is a construction of Hitlers favorite architect, Albert Speer. 320.000 people fit into this empty space. The sound of a rowing regatta from a near lake spilled over, not able to fill the emptiness left by the dreams of empire.

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About The Author

By thorsten
Major influence just now: Severance on Apple. Incredible work by cinematographer Jessica Lee Gagné (and everybody else working on it). Imho the best show since Sopranos and Twin Peaks. Further running: Akira Kurosawa, Wes Anderson, Billy Wilder, and as always, Kubrick. The night before Salgado died I ran into Donata Wenders and her husband Wim. We talked about shooting film, and printing in the bathroom.
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Comments

Andrew on 5 Frames with a Fuji X-Half

Comment posted: 14/08/2025

Fascinating! That x-half comes in for a lot of criticism on the internet forums (all by people who haven’t used it, mind!). I have to say that your pictures look fantastic and that little camera looks like a great performer.
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 14/08/2025

Thank you, Andrew! The X-Half is a very cool little performer. Tiny, and fitting in you palm, it is perfect for street or discrete journalistic work.

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Gary Smith on 5 Frames with a Fuji X-Half

Comment posted: 14/08/2025

Nobody lends me cameras... :-(

It appears to perform well in your hands! Thanks for your review Torsten.
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 14/08/2025

Sure Thing, Gary… want to borrow my Plaubel 4 x 5? Or I have a nice Pentax MX with three lenses…

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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 14/08/2025

Hamish is the only person ever to lend me a camera!!!

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Ibraar Hussain on 5 Frames with a Fuji X-Half

Comment posted: 14/08/2025

Thanks Thorsten, Really enjoyed this and the look of the images is very good - very Pen F like
Great tone and composition man, specially like the Kiss and the Pizza girl!
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 14/08/2025

Thank you, Ibraar… I had to run inconspicuously ahaead a bit to get the SUD into the frame ;))

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David Hume on 5 Frames with a Fuji X-Half

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

Good stuff Thorsten - great to see this. It reinforces, I think, that this is indeed a capable camera irrespective of what people (who've not used it) say about its gimmicks.

Your photos reinforced my own observation that the sensor is just fine, and that the clever simulations and processing make a case that here "JPEG is the new RAW" as they hold DR really well if you want to play with them. but they're also nice as they are...
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

Dear David, exactly my thoughts. Fuji rather used this one as a testbed, and there is functionality that may translate into the next X-Pro. Using the lever became second nature fast, and it could be a nice nod to analog on the upper echelon cameras. The same goes for the different approaches to switching the film simulations. There is the wheel on the X-E5, and the option on the X-Half makes sense for anybody who ever used an SLR with the window, back in the days when DX-coding was cool. And about JPEG, to be honest with you, I never used RAW. When I come from a job there are 1500 pictures on several bodies that need immediate editing and transfer, and my JPEGs never let me down, whatever tweaking I put them trough in Lightroom ;))

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Paul Taylor on 5 Frames with a Fuji X-Half

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

My issue with this camera is it's price. While I have no doubt it is a capable and fun camera despite it's interface "flaws" - for $900 it is a bit of a joke. I think it is several hundred dollars overpriced when you consider what $900+ dollars can buy you. I don't think I am alone in this though - as unlike most new releases from Fuji - this one didn't sell out immediately and be on backorder for months and months.

And while I understand that it is a bit apples to oranges except in "format" - $900 will buy you a new Pentax 17, a complete color and B&W developing kit (tank, chems, heater, pitchers, containers) from Cinestill, a darkbag, and 10 or so rolls of film (in addition to the roll or two most sellers seem to include with a new 17 these days.)
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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

I wouldn’t pay, brand new, when feeling generous, and having recently won the lottery more than $150 for this. In reality I wouldn’t even pay $10 for it and I’d never want to use it. It looks cool and I like what Thorsten and other have done but that’s down to their skill and ability

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Christian Hogue on 5 Frames with a Fuji X-Half

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

i too initially bthought it eas just SILLY.. but after playing with one. im jow really enjoying mine! small light fun. a bit slow but rekatively cheap for a fuji. i shoot portrait 99% of the time and it has become my everyday carry meaning i dont resort to my phone camera anymore..
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

And that is exactly the idea, Christian, to lure people away from shooting with their phones. You shoot portrait, connect the camera and upload to Insta anyway… all with a photographic experience more real than straing at you gorilla glass display, what you do all day long anyway ;))

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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

I know it sounds strange but apart from pictures to grab, say paperwork or a form, or some evidence, or perhaps something I want to show somebody ie a visual record such as the cat doing something silly, I haven’t taken an actual photograph with my phone for over 3 years. What I find it superb for is video! However I totally get the purpose of the XHalf - my comment about the price is pretty much worthless as this is made to appeal to a different market. For its purposes it is superb and people will and have been buying it without much thought of costs. To be honest, I couldn’t ever justify spending much on a camera anyway - so even one of lust after I’d not buy as there’d be no point apart from the feeling of wanting something. Now if someone can loan me a Leica S2 with a Kodak CCD I’d be there best mate for life

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Leon Winnert on 5 Frames with a Fuji X-Half

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

I remember when half frames came out some 45 years ago. Treated as a novelty. Appealed to certain alternative elements. Didn’t last very long if I recall. In the Marmite category.

Great pictures Thorsten.

For none British readers. Marmite is a yeast extract spread. Which you put on your toast and in your egg sandwiches. You either love it or hate it. No half measures. I love it. Australian vegimite is similar.
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

Thank you, Leon. Right with you about the Marmite. Will never forget my first buttered Toast, laying it on thick, as I expected something sweet ;))

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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

hehe!!! I use that term and forget that not everyone knows what it means!

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John Furlong replied:

Comment posted: 15/08/2025

Don't forget Marmite and peanut butter (crunchy is my preference...)

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