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Gear Regret : I am sorry I sold that

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  • Mar 21, 2026
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I sold my Canon FD 20mm lenses a few years ago. Now I regret it. I really love that lense.

Jeff
 
i used to buy, fix and resell falling plate cameras ..
i found one years ago, that had a variable shutter speed,
and a beautiful long format. i sold it and a few weeks later
i sold a both a wollensak exwa 3 1/2 lens ( f12 ) and a air corp 90mm raptar
i miss them still ...
not to mention a record cutting lathe ( like a recordio but 33rpm ) and 25 blank plates for
making ambient noise to play behind some of my work :sad:

sorry about your situation paul! hope you find work soon ..

john
 
Hmmm...never sold anything...gave away an EOS650 with a sticky shutter...but that was a great excuse to buy an EOS1n...technically a swap :D
 
sorry about your situation paul! hope you find work soon ..

john

Not a problem John, I was really only joking. I got severance pay. I did have thoughts about selling a couple of lenses, though, to help my daughter with tuition. Thanks for the kind words.

Paul
 
It is very difficult for me to decide to sell a camera due to the fear of regret. I have a P67 with 6 lenses that I never use and can't bring myself to sell. A 4x5 with several lenses that is closet decoration but I could never sell it.

My biggest regret is a mint Rollei 3.5F sold to a friend who completely trashed it in less than a year. Including putting it in a bag with a banana that rotted and smashed into the controls of the camera. I gave her a really good deal too. Damn it.
 
I sold a 1971 Nikkor 50mm f1,4. I had regrets almost right after. I then bought a 1972 50 f1,4, his younger brother. Will keep it as I've learned my lesson.
:rolleyes:
 
Canon EF 85 1.8. Regretted it so much I had to buy another one. Lesson learnt!
 
I should never have sold that "like new" Zeiss Super Ikonta I picked up in a thrift shop for $10. But I was young and foolish and figured that a camera that was built to deliver only 11 exposures per 120 roll would cost me a fortune in foregone pictures in the long run.

Getting that $10 back seemed like a smart idea at the time.
 
Ah, yes, a Minolta SRT 102. It was ergonomically wonderful, fit my hand like a glove. Sold it and "traded up" to a Canon F1 system when I started working full time as a newspaper photographer. The Canon is like a brick, the Minolta was elegant. The quality of the negatives the Minolta produced was excellent. Still have some of the negatives, and I salve my longing by just not shooting 35mm any more.

Lesson learned. I will never sell my Rollei TLR, nor likely any of the other gear I've accumulated. Except maybe the Canon.

Peter Gomena
 
Update on Plaubel Makina

In an earlier post I lamented selling my Plaubel Makina 67 and buying a Mamiya 7 with three lenses; as I said in that post, I never bonded with the Mamiya, and in fact never used it much
List member Phil from Burlington, Vermont Pm'd me that his local camera store had two on the shelf; a 67 and a W67. He was kind enough to provide me with their website. I called, spoke to Broc, the sales manager and we worked out a very fair trade; my Mamiya and lenses plus a little cash for both Plaubel Makinas
It turns out that these cameras belonged to the University of Vermont Medical School and were never used outside. As well, they were overhauled 8 months ago and come with a one year warranty.
I shipped off the Mamiya without a tear. The cameras should arrive by the end of the week. I could not be happier.

Thanks again Phil.

Donald
 
I miss the Arca Swiss B I once had and foolishly sold, thinking I'd never get to be able to enlarge 4x5" negatives. It was a nice, light monorail that I was able to backpack with. I wish I could find one of these again.
 
Donald,

Nice story, and nice of Phil to help you out with the tip. I've got a 67W and find it a great travel camera, being relatively lightweight and thin when collapsed. My one concern is that I don't find the finder image framing to be very accurate. On the other hand, I really appreciate the in-finder meter and the fact that the aperture ring has no detents so you can set precise f/stops. I hope you enjoy your two new cameras.

Trask
 
For me, it is a real D'oh (slaps forehead) moment. I sold my Rolleiflex 2.8 Planar in order to buy a Canon D30 digicam in about 2001. Terrible decision.
At the time digital was the future, websites were saying the D30 was a good as 35mm and close to medium format up to 8x12"- Stupid.
I don't have the D30 it cost me about £2K but I did buy a Rollei T last summer - we can learn from our mistakes.
 
Century Graphic with RF coupled 80mm Xenotar and 2 6x7 backs. Think I traded it for a Super Crown Graphic body. Miss that too.
 
For me, it is a real D'oh (slaps forehead) moment. I sold my Rolleiflex 2.8 Planar in order to buy a Canon D30 digicam in about 2001. Terrible decision.
At the time digital was the future, websites were saying the D30 was a good as 35mm and close to medium format up to 8x12"- Stupid.
I don't have the D30 it cost me about £2K but I did buy a Rollei T last summer - we can learn from our mistakes.

I have no regrets jumping off the digital bandwagon for a while. I'm hoping that I can be patient enough for the pixel-war stupidity to settle down.

It is amazing how history repeats itself:

3MP - better than film, look at these wonderful 13x19 prints
6MP - No wait, 6MP is better than film, we were wrong about 3MP
8MP - Cat's meow, we've finally arrived, 6MP is aweful
10MP - Finally we can print larger than 24x36
16MP - Cooking with oil! 10MP is horrid, can't even make an 8x10.
24MP - 16MP? That's just so last year. Can't even make a 5x7 with that.
60MP - We can now print 11x14!!!!!

And the beat goes on...
 
What a great summary, Ken
Digitals most serious problem for me is the lack of interchangeable sensors. As long as there isnt some severe competition on things like that I will never jump back to digital for serious photography.

PS I did sell my digital cam just to get rid of it and I will never regret it.
I was never forced to sell sth in order to buy new stuff. I just sell the "bad" stuff when I need space and my conscience allows me to do so.
 
I have a near-sell storry that would have been on this list. I shoot weddings, and to help with low light I bought a Canon 24-105mm f4 IS "L" lens. Damn nice lens. Since I had a 20mm, I figured that would be wide enough for darn near anything, so my 17-40 "L" was soon to be listed on eBay...

Then I got a call from someone who needed interior shots of older, small-roomed houses. Needless to say, even the 17mm end is barely wide enough to capture a decent image in many of these tight spots.

The funny thing is, now the 24-105mm is probably going to be sold instead. IS doesn't really do much for wedding shots. There, you're more likely to have images ruined by subject movement than lens movement.

I guess as far as regrets, I do miss the Maxxum 7 I had that took fine pictures. When I wanted to add digital to my camera bag, Minolta still didn't have a *first* DSLR while Canon and Nikon had third generation cameras. So I sold all my Maxxum gear and invested in Canon. No "real" regrets with that, but man, Maxxum 7's are selling for a pretty penny these days. I did eventually get a Maxxum 800si and love it. Maybe someday I'll get another "7"...
 
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I would never sell any of my stuff. I lost a Micro-Nikkor 200mm f/4 a few years ago and to this day I miss it. They are difficult to get.
 
I lost track of a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye and a Voightlander Vito IIb when I moved out from home. I would like to have those now.

Steve
 
It is amazing how history repeats itself:

Exactly! Well, I've never traded my film cameras with digi stuff, but back in 2003 or 2004, I bought a pretty decent inkjet printer and was hoping I could make B&W prints with it as it was advertized and I would not need to use a darkroom anymore.

Well, a year after that, I built my first darkroom in my place and I've been using it ever since.
 
I've bought and sold equipment through the years, but for the most part, everything I've sold has either been a duplication of something else or was something that I didn't really care for. All the really nice stuff I've kept. But part of that is sticking with one primary system. As a teenager I bought a pair (actually three at one point) Yashica GS/GSN cameras, but age 20 I bought an OM-2S. With the exception of various medium-format and large-format systems, I'm still using Olympus--even still using that original camera and lens.
 
When I needed money I sold my Canon P. That was dumb and I barely got any $ for it. I found another one a few months ago, but it had shutter problems so I got a Canon 7 instead. Nice camera, but it's not the same.
 
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