Good equipment, well-maintained, is a joy to use, and it is usually more durable and lasts longer. But If you can't take good photos without high-end gear, you can't take good photos
hi doc w:
while i agree with most of what you have said there is something about the last part .
certain types of non-high-end-gear takes learning how to use, it takes patience and understanding
and having an open mind and experimenting a little bit. whether it is a lens that works best in a certain
type of lighting conditions or a camera whose exposure or focus controls need to be understood better.
a lot of people who pick up a camera ( high end or low end ) don't really want to take the time to learn
how to operate it,how to use it .. its, and the users combined limitations. with a shiney new hassle hoff or
rollei or ebony or leica or ( fillin the blank ) to a certain extant, the limitations are only the photographer's, not the equipment.
not to say beautiful cameras don't have limitations ( it is hard to do "street" work with a view camera, and it is hard to to PC work wtih a 35mm )
that said, if you ever saw the film called "lumiere and company" you would have seen something like 100
best movie makers from across the planet. they were given the opportunity to shoot a IDK 90 second film using
the lumiere brothers' original movie camera ( maybe it was the one used to film the train IDK ) the same way the lumiere brothers did.
while all the movie makers made their films not many of them did more than run 90 seconds of film through
the camera and enjoy actually using the first movie camera.
to me at least there is a distinction between using the camera and USING the camera.
while spike lee's film of a baby eating food in a high chair was kind of fun, david lynch's film went beyond fun, he was able
to USE the camera, not just use it.