Has anyone ever actually proven that you can't take it with you. That could be a ploy to keep you from continuing to put money in a "money-pit", whichever one it is. Remember, no one has been there and come back. Well almost no one.....Regards!Now that I've sold off about 60% of my camera gear (all 35mm cameras and lenses except one), it's amazing how much money I have sunk into this hobby. Built up over the last 10 years, I had well over $10,000 in hardware! No wonder my wife gets angry from time to time (and is ecstatic these days).
This is not a critical comment towards others (or myself!) as that gear gave me immense pleasure during the past 10 years. You have to spend your money on something, as you can't take it with you.
I still have my medium format gear, and the digitals, which are worth next to nothing since time has passed them by.
Don't kid yourself. I am 87 and I still see cameras that I would like to own. But there is at least one that I probably don't have strength enough to pick up and mount on a proper tripod, a Linhof Super Technika but it still tempts me. I found some years ago that basically there are only two things wrong with me. I can stand anything but pain and resist anything but temptation but age has tempered the second. So, I'll make do with what I have until I can no longer pick them up. Did anyone know that Hasselblads gain weight as do Rolleicords......Regards!I got back into photography right about the time i joined APUG.
To put things in perspective, i was born in 1960, and first got into photography in high school. circa 1977.
At that time i had no idea that Canon made an F1. I thought my AE-1 was "the best" camera that Canon made.
By 1980 i was well ware of the F1, and of course the Nikon F2 and coming F3. Not to mention all of the fine Pentax, Minolta, and Olympus offerings.
But life intervened. I never got a Guggenheim, never worked for National Geographic or The New York Times...never shot Rolling Stone covers, etc etc etc.
Getting back into it "now", and seeing all those cameras i dreamed about as a much younger man, i went ape-shit on Ebay. I could not believe i could get a Nikon F2 for 100-200 bux.
But then the cameras needed a CLA.
I had WAY Too Many of them, and way too may lens, so i started to sell them off one at a time. I STILL need to sell some more, but at least i have gotten started.
I have not quite spent the same amount of money, but I can totally relate to The OP.
I got excited and bought way more cameras than i can use. Maybe, if i was 30, but not at 60. I need to pick just a few and become a better photographer. I do not have time to to be collector or an authority on all the different brands and iterations of the 35mm SLR; and I do not really care.
I just want to learn some of the "Tricks" and Ins and Outs of Black & White Film Photography.
I am VERY fortunate to have been able to convert a spare bedroom into a darkroom.
I got carried away with buying the "Cameras Of My Youth", and now i need to come to my senses.
Please tell your wife not to tell anyone what she told you. We don't want everyone to learn the truth about film photography. I must say, she sounds very perceptive.....Regards!My wife has been telling me for more than forty years to get myself a mistress and set her up in an apartmentbecause it would be cheaper than my photography
I told my wife what you wrote, and she said "tell him I wasn't joking".Please tell your wife not to tell anyone what she told you. We don't want everyone to learn the truth about film photography. I must say, she sounds very perceptive.....Regards!
Don't kid yourself. I am 87 and I still see cameras that I would like to own. But there is at least one that I probably don't have strength enough to pick up and mount on a proper tripod, a Linhof Super Technika but it still tempts me. I found some years ago that basically there are only two things wrong with me. I can stand anything but pain and resist anything but temptation but age has tempered the second. So, I'll make do with what I have until I can no longer pick them up. Did anyone know that Hasselblads gain weight as do Rolleicords......Regards!
My wife has been telling me for more than forty years to get myself a mistress and set her up in an apartmentbecause it would be cheaper than my photography
It worked out well for Edward Weston.My wife has been telling me for more than forty years to get myself a mistress ...
Don't kid yourself. I am 87 and I still see cameras that I would like to own. But there is at least one that I probably don't have strength enough to pick up and mount on a proper tripod, a Linhof Super Technika but it still tempts me. I found some years ago that basically there are only two things wrong with me. I can stand anything but pain and resist anything but temptation but age has tempered the second. So, I'll make do with what I have until I can no longer pick them up. Did anyone know that Hasselblads gain weight as do Rolleicords......Regards!
My wife has been telling me for more than forty years to get myself a mistress and set her up in an apartmentbecause it would be cheaper than my photography
That's a brilliant idea. I mean the apartment, not the mistress.
You'd have all of the kitchen (or bathroom) for your darkroom. Living room and bedroom for a photographic studio and/or a workshop etc.
Best of all, when you're there, your wife will think that you're with a cost saving mistress. Win Win.
I gave up Starbucks that I might be able to buy film. Just about a cup for a roll ratio.
I gave up Starbucks that I might be able to buy film. Just about a cup for a roll ratio.
I'd rather give up film than Starbucks coffee. I get pleasure every day out of coffee.
I don't have to get out of my pajamas to make my coffee just like I like it at home. Who wants to drive to Starbucks?I'd rather give up film than Starbucks coffee. I get pleasure every day out of coffee.
I don't have to get out of my pajamas to make my coffee just like I like it at home. Who wants to drive to Starbucks?
I think this speaks volumes...I'd rather give up film than Starbucks coffee. I get pleasure every day out of coffee.
I love coffee. I've been drinking it since I was four years old (as a kid, going to the restaurant with my father, he'd order two coffees and the waitress would smile as she gave me coffee).
Anyway, I have had the pleasure of experiencing very good coffee in various countries all over the world. I realize tastes may vary, but to put this as diplomatically as I can, what Starbucks produces is less akin to coffee as it is to toilet bowl cleanser. As I've said before, if it weren't for first date meetups and free WiFi, Starbucks couldn't exist.
It's great fun for a lot of people to bash Starbucks. I'm not sure why as it's one of the more responsible companies out there. Part time employees get health coverage. How many places do that? Part timers get stock options. I never got squat when I worked jobs like that when i was young.
Plus, they make a product that millions of people every day truly enjoy. No one is compelled to visit Starbucks. They are not selling a necessity. People go because what is offered for sale is worth their money.
It takes a special kind of person to find fault with this.
Please tell your wife not to tell anyone what she told you. We don't want everyone to learn the truth about film photography. I must say, she sounds very perceptive.....Regards![
I think it's amazing that my wife ( I married more than fifty years ago ) still thinks that I can still do anything with a mistressThat's about all I could do now with this arrangement at my age Scott, notwithstanding the mistress
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