The simple, beginner-friendly guide to building the perfect Olympus OM starter kit.

One of the joys of the Olympus OM system is how many lenses exist for it – small, sharp, affordable, and beautifully made.

But for beginners, the choice can feel overwhelming:

  • Which focal lengths do I actually need?
  • Do I need a wide-angle?
  • Is the 50mm enough?
  • Should I get something for portraits?

This guide gives you the three-lens starter kit that works for every OM beginner, explains why it works, and lists the exact lens versions worth buying.

These are the lenses that teach you composition, variety, and creative control – without spending a fortune.


The OM Beginner Holy Trinity

  • 28mm (wide)
  • 50mm (normal)
  • 135mm (telephoto)

With these three lenses, you can shoot:

  • travel
  • street
  • portraits
  • landscapes
  • seascapes
  • details
  • documentary
  • everyday life

This is the classic OM starter set – and still unbeatable today.

Let’s break it down.

1. The 50mm – Your Everyday Lens

If you buy only one Zuiko lens, buy this.

The Zuiko 50mm is:

  • sharp
  • light
  • cheap
  • versatile
  • great for learning
  • perfect for beginners

It sees roughly how the human eye sees, making it the ideal training tool.

Best versions to buy:

  • Zuiko 50mm f/1.8 (late serials, “Made in Japan”)
  • Zuiko 50mm f/1.4 (MC version, later serials)
  • Zuiko 50mm f/3.5 Macro (underrated and extremely sharp)

What it teaches:

  • composition
  • exposure
  • natural perspective
  • depth of field control (f/1.8 is perfect for learning)

What it’s ideal for:

  • portraits
  • street
  • travel
  • general everyday shooting

Every OM beginner must own a 50mm.

It’s your anchor lens.

2. The 28mm – The World-Building Lens

When you want to capture more of the scene.

The 28mm gives you:

  • wider field of view
  • stronger sense of place
  • dynamic angles
  • better storytelling in tight spaces
  • more depth of field naturally

It’s fantastic for:

  • landscapes
  • architecture
  • environmental portraits
  • street
  • travel
  • interiors

Best versions to buy:

  • Zuiko 28mm f/3.5 → tiny, cheap, sharp
  • Zuiko 28mm f/2.8 → more modern rendering, great contrast

What it teaches:

  • controlling foregrounds
  • composition with leading lines
  • using depth of field creatively

Beginners often skip wide-angle lenses, but the 28mm completes the picture – literally.

3. The 135mm – The Compression & Portrait Lens

When you want subject separation, compression, and cinematic depth.

The 135mm changes your photography instantly:

  • backgrounds blur more
  • distances compress
  • portraits look flattering
  • distant subjects come closer
  • details become isolated

Despite being telephoto, OM 135mm lenses are incredibly small and light.

Best versions to buy:

  • Zuiko 135mm f/3.5 → cheap, very sharp, lightweight
  • Zuiko 135mm f/2.8 → brighter, slightly better for portraits

What it teaches:

  • controlling perspective
  • isolating subjects
  • using compression creatively
  • hand-hold stability at longer focal lengths

The 135mm is the beginner’s secret weapon – a film-era tele that gives gorgeous results for almost no money.

Why These Three Lenses Work Perfectly Together

Focal lengthWhat it gives you Why beginners need it
28mmWidestorytelling, immersive Learn foregrounds & depth
50mmNatural perspective Foundation of everything
135mmCompressionblur, isolation Learn portraits & distance

They form a complete creative toolkit.

No gaps.

No redundancy.

Every beginner learns faster with these focal lengths because they each teach a different way of seeing.


What NOT to Buy Yet

35–70mm zooms

Soft, slow, unnecessary early on.

75–150mm zoom

Fun but redundant as a starter.

21mm ultra-wide

Too specialised for a first kit.

85mm f/2

Beautiful lens – but expensive and not essential in the first three.

50mm f/1.2

Too pricey for beginners; not needed until you develop your style.

Stick to the Holy Trinity first.

Everything else becomes easier afterwards.


Beginner Buying Checklist

Before buying any Zuiko lens:

  • Check for fungus
  • Check aperture blades snap shut quickly
  • Make sure focus ring is smooth
  • Prefer late-serial “Made in Japan” versions
  • Avoid heavy haze – cleaning won’t always fix it

Conclusion

Your first three Zuiko lenses don’t need to be expensive or exotic.

They just need to give you a complete creative range:

  • 28mm for space and storytelling
  • 50mm for everyday scenes
  • 135mm for portraits and isolation

With these three, your OM kit is capable of almost anything – and you’ll learn faster, shoot more confidently, and build a better foundation for every lens you buy afterwards.

Share.