Q.G.
Member
You're distorting what he said to make your point. He in no way said anything against his Yashica, nor did he say there was anything wrong with starting out with it or using the Yashica to pay his bills at one time in his life.
He also said his Hasselblad collects dust, while he would never part with his Rollei, or words to that effect. The point he was making, as I read it, is that people should figure out what type of camera works for them.
Which I think is good solid advice.
People have a lot of fun with Ricoh, Yashica, Minolta, Mamiya and Seagull TLR's. Ok, they're not Rolleiflexes, but they also don't cost like one. Not everyone feels they have to have the ultimate whatever.
It was yet another example of someone who started using cameras from one group, ended up having cameras from another group. (Traded one camera of one type for another camera of the same type. Why?)
Noone said that people don't have fun with all those cameras you mention. They also tend to accumulate cameras, until they find one they, for some reason or another, stick with.
And for some reason or another, that choice tends to fall on a small group of cameras.
We may or may not like that, but it is how it is.
Despite the excitement it caused, it is good solid advice too, to figure out what camera you will end up, and skip spending money on the rest.
It used to be that many people thought that the three i mentioned were priced well beyond what anyone should spend on a camera. And rightly so.
And that indeed was why many cameras existed: they offered an affordable alternative. Most, if not all, would not even have existed had the other group been as cheap as they were.
But times have changed dramatically. And despite some people still being stuck in the "way too expensive" rut, they really are very affordable today.