These images were all shot with the brand new Fujifilm XF 10-24mm f/4 R OIS zoom lens. This gallery accompanies my blog review of the lens. Metadata for the photos appears below the larger image after clicking on a thumbnail.
There are few things to note. Firstly, the lens is very well coated and does not suffer from much flare, even when shooting right into the sun - see photos 2, 13, 19, 21 and 25. Secondly, the OIS (Optical Image Stabilizer) is really quite effective. Photos 10 and 23 were shot hand-held and free-standing (not braced) and exhibit surprising sharpness; they were shot with exposure times of 0.7 and 1.0 second respectively. Compare image 9, shot at low ISO, stopped down and on a tripod, with image 10, which was handheld, wide open and at a higher ISO. Thirdly, photos 14 to 16 do appear to have some sensor induced moiré from my X-E2. The finely woven suspended mesh would be a brutal test for any sharp digital-camera/lens combination to render cleanly.
Finally, most images were processed in a beta version of PhotoNinja which does have some weirdness when it comes to highlight recovery. In most cases, distortion was corrected for using presets I hurriedly created manually in PhotoNinja. Note that current Adobe software raw conversions will automatically correct for lens distortion already. Some shots had vertical perspective corrections applied in Lightroom as well, but some were purposely left dramatic to give a better sense of the degree of convergence a lens like this can be capable of.