Shooting the Fujifilm GFX100S in 2026: Slowing Down When Life Won’t

2026 has been a pretty eventful year for me so far.

It started off in the Philippines, trying to sell our belongings and arrange our international family move back to Scotland. Sorting out all the loose ends while also getting a home organised from the other side of the world was a bit of a logistical nightmare.

A grandma leans in to give her grandaughter a kiss from behind while the grandaughter is busy eating the muffins that they have just cooked together. Photo is taken on a Fujifilm GFX100S camera.
Fuji GFX100S + 45mm f/2.8. F/2.8, 1/220, ISO 6400.

However, we managed to arrange everything after basically culling our belongings down to the bare minimum.

At the end of January, we arrived in Scotland and spent the next few weeks making the new house feel like a home. Buying the essentials, finding suitable furniture and helping Sofia settle into school.

An ethereal feeling photo of a small woodland trail amongst trees. Photo taken on the Fuji GFX100S camera and Fuji GF 80mm 1.7 lens.
Fuji GFX100S + 80mm 1.7. F/2.8, 1/170, ISO 100

Things finally started to calm down a little.

Then I received a phone call from the lettings agent.

The call left me stunned.

We had taken on the house as a long term let, somewhere to settle and build family life here. A place to give Sofia and Isabelle a secure, comfortable environment to grow up in.

But after the call, everything changed again.

a bright red post box in Scotland with trees in the background.
F/2.8, 1/300, ISO 200

The owners of the house had changed their minds and decided they wanted to move back in themselves. So with just two weeks before my wife and Isabelle arrived in the UK, I suddenly found myself desperately searching for another house for us to call home.

By that point Sofia had settled into school really well, made new friends and joined the local horse riding club, so I had to limit my house search to somewhere within a reasonable commute because I wasn’t prepared to disrupt her again.

A young girl in a pram wearing a padded jacket while waving to the camera.
Isabelle on one of her daily walks here. Fuji GFX100S + Fuji GF 80mm 1.7.

With the whole move being driven largely by our developmental concerns regarding Isabelle, and with her arrival already delayed due to the situation around Iran making the usual transit through Dubai unsafe, I was suddenly juggling rearranged flights alongside trying to secure another home and dealing with uncertainty over how long we even had left in the current one.

I didn’t tell my wife about the house situation at the time.

I didn’t really see the point. It was up to me to sort it out and try and do so without making her worry even more during an already stressful move.

Now, nearly two months after their arrival, I’m relieved to say that I found another home for us.

Flowers and leaves captured to show the vivid colour produced by the Fuji GFX100S camera.
F/5.6, 1/100, ISO 160.

It’s a bit smaller and a bit further away from Sofia’s school, but it’s in a lovely countryside location and it genuinely feels like somewhere we can make home.

So for the last few weeks, I’ve really struggled to think straight, let alone get out for as much photography as I’d like.

We’re settling Isabelle into nursery life here, arranging medical appointments and thankfully she seems to be adapting really well to life and routine in Scotland.

My mental load though still hasn’t really reduced.

Recently I’ve found myself gravitating back to very ordinary subjects.

There are still tensions within the house and unfortunately I suspect those tensions are going to come to a head over the next few weeks as I look to ensure that my youngest daughter’s best interests remain prioritised, even if that creates some conflict.

With all of this going on, and having spent a lot of time lately shooting wildlife with the Nikon Z8 — a camera built around speed and responsiveness — for the last few days, whenever I’ve managed to muster the energy for small local walks, I’ve found myself taking the Fujifilm GFX100S instead.

A camera that even when it was released back in 2021 wasn’t exactly considered fast.

And honestly, I think that’s part of why I need it right now.

The fact that it isn’t a fast camera forces me to slow down a little. It forces me to focus more carefully on shooting technique because that 100 megapixel sensor is brutally unforgiving of sloppy handling.

But more than that, after shooting a lot of bursts lately with wildlife on the Z8, I think my mental space right now requires something slower, more purposeful, more meaningful and ultimately more calming as I sense an oncoming storm building again.

About Me

I’m David Fleet, a British full-time photographer and content creator based in the Philippines for a decade, now returned to Scotland in 2026. I began my photography journey as a professional landscape photographer in 2008 and have since worked across Asia, Europe, and beyond. Over the years I’ve shot with nearly every major camera system — including Fujifilm, Nikon, Canon, Sony, Panasonic, OM System, and Ricoh — always focusing on real-world use rather than lab tests.

Here’s my complete Fujifilm gear list, covering every Fuji camera and lens I’ve owned and used over the years.

Brand or PR enquiries: get in touch or view my Media & Press Information.

If you’d like to follow along more closely, I also share occasional emails reflecting on photography, gear, and life. As I prepare to move back to Scotland after a decade in Southeast Asia, it’s a quiet space to share perspective from working with familiar tools in new environments.

Follow the journey

Leave a Comment