I'm having mixed feelings about CR and similar people going on rounds scouting Europe and their native countries for deals on cameras in bulk and singles, and then seemingly scalping them off.
Are they really rescuing these cameras, or are they just taking deals away from local people and playing their part in inflating prices more than necessary?
The scalping thing is well known from post-hipster retro store owners going round old peoples homes, estates, abandoned storage sales etc. making a living off of aggressively scooping up deals on furniture and brickabrack, before common people have the slightest chance. Then selling the stuff for double to ten times the price they bought it for.
Is CR the camera version of this?
Some would make the case that they actually do a CLA on these and check them over.
But I can check the camera over on my own, and if they actually were to perform a real thorough CLA on all of the cameras they get in, they would never make any money off the venture.
What's more, they treat their stuff like shit. They bunch them up in big vats and in big piles, and proudly post pictures of it.
Is that how you treat stuff you are trying to sell? And if you do, wouldn't you at least want to hide it from your customers if you had the slightest sense in your head?
There might be people who say they don't care the slightest about cosmetic condition.
Good for them. But I'd wager that they are lying.
Photography is a visually aesthetic art. It would be very weird if the people practicing it, didn't also appreciate great design and finish.
There is good patina, from loving use and there are marks after sloppy, crass, barbaric idiots (professionals among them), not appreciating good design.
Marks from being piled up is an example of the last.
There is a reason a camera in good cosmetic condition, will go for many times the price of one with similarly perfect functionality but with a dinged up, scratched body.
I have no doubt that cameras have been thrown out to a shocking degree until a few years ago, by people simply not knowing what they had. Thinking film cameras where worthless.
But I think that is an exceedingly rare occurrence today, and not something these guys could potentially play a big part in stopping the tail end of.
People still throwing away cameras are hermit like people, with little contact to others, or chance of being contacted, and not ones likely to do research.
The big lots CR buy would IMO be better kept and sold locally through a single transaction.
So, is CR doing some, or all good, or are they best avoided, both from a moral ground and personal?
Hope I haven't been to tendentious and leading with this thread title and first post. But I think it's an important discussion to have.
Are they really rescuing these cameras, or are they just taking deals away from local people and playing their part in inflating prices more than necessary?
The scalping thing is well known from post-hipster retro store owners going round old peoples homes, estates, abandoned storage sales etc. making a living off of aggressively scooping up deals on furniture and brickabrack, before common people have the slightest chance. Then selling the stuff for double to ten times the price they bought it for.
Is CR the camera version of this?
Some would make the case that they actually do a CLA on these and check them over.
But I can check the camera over on my own, and if they actually were to perform a real thorough CLA on all of the cameras they get in, they would never make any money off the venture.
What's more, they treat their stuff like shit. They bunch them up in big vats and in big piles, and proudly post pictures of it.
Is that how you treat stuff you are trying to sell? And if you do, wouldn't you at least want to hide it from your customers if you had the slightest sense in your head?
There might be people who say they don't care the slightest about cosmetic condition.
Good for them. But I'd wager that they are lying.
Photography is a visually aesthetic art. It would be very weird if the people practicing it, didn't also appreciate great design and finish.
There is good patina, from loving use and there are marks after sloppy, crass, barbaric idiots (professionals among them), not appreciating good design.
Marks from being piled up is an example of the last.
There is a reason a camera in good cosmetic condition, will go for many times the price of one with similarly perfect functionality but with a dinged up, scratched body.
I have no doubt that cameras have been thrown out to a shocking degree until a few years ago, by people simply not knowing what they had. Thinking film cameras where worthless.
But I think that is an exceedingly rare occurrence today, and not something these guys could potentially play a big part in stopping the tail end of.
People still throwing away cameras are hermit like people, with little contact to others, or chance of being contacted, and not ones likely to do research.
The big lots CR buy would IMO be better kept and sold locally through a single transaction.
So, is CR doing some, or all good, or are they best avoided, both from a moral ground and personal?
Hope I haven't been to tendentious and leading with this thread title and first post. But I think it's an important discussion to have.
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