I still use Pentax and Nikon cameras, however, the Nikon is the only one I developed into a system. I have a large inventory of lenses (14mm to 2000mm) and a variety of viewfinders, backs, motor drives, view screens, and other accessories for the Nikon. I only have three lenses (28, 50, and 135mm) for the Pentax.
I briefly worked in the trade when the Canon T-series were about to be launched and thought they represented everything that was wrong with modern photography - I was using a plain prism Nikon F at the time. My views regarding the T's and the T90 in particular mellowed sufficiently over the years that I owned most of them. I could never describe the T90 as wonderful feeling. It was the prototype of jelly mould, wheel controlled, multi-function LCD dSLR cameras that exist to this day. With the added annoyance of multiple AA batteries and some functions hidden behind a body panel.The most wonderful feeling cameras I have owned were the Canon T-90..
If internet commentary is to be believed you haven't even started. People seem to swap between Canon, Fuji, Sony and Nikon systems and various sensor sizes on a monthly basis. I'm barely getting to know the controls in the time they've made the rounds.That sounds like too many basic system changes.
So true.I've had friends who owned various brands. I've long come to the conclusion that there is no one best camera or brand for everyone. Shoot what you like because you can get great results with any of them.
That's the stuff I started with. I have the 8 element 50 1.4 Super Takumar, it goes with a virgin SP500 ,like my first SLR. I don't shoot much 35 anymore. I went to Nikon in '73 due to intense marketing from EPOI.Update from my 2012 post
I now have the following lenses for my Pentax Spotmatics:
Asahi 28mm f/3.5 Super-Multi-Coated Takumar
Asahi 50mm f/1.4 Super Takumar (8-element)
Asahi 105mm f/2.8 Super Takumar
Asahi 135mm f/3.5 Super Takumar
Asahi 200mm f/5.6 Super Takumar
Asahi 300mm f/6.3 preset Tele Takumar
Pentax System by Narsuitus, on Flickr
Picked up a Nikon FE2 and MD-12 and ran. Used that setup into being an actual photojournalist.
Yes it was a great setup. I worked for my University’s PR department while attending classes. Basically taking grip and grins, and candid photos. The FE2 was always spot on.That's an excellent PJ setup. Once I had to be play university's photojournalist for a week-long event, and this is exactly the setup i used. The FE2 is excellent.
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