My first camera in college: Canon AE-1 with 50/1.8 lens. I have all the time in the world: riding a bike, with my camera and going out and taking photos of everything. The college has darkroom for B&W, and the instructor was very helpful. I was working as a part-time IT support for a local camera shop thus get color film and development cheap. That was as perfect as anything when just learning photography.
GAS happens much later when I have more funds.
In my youth, I worked at one of the largest photo retailers and pro rental facilities in the Central US. One of my many jobs was to clean up used equipment we'd just taken in to make it presentable for sale. It is there that I learned the many wonders of Nikon, Hasselblad, Leica, and such.
It is also where I learned that having the well-heeled buy- and then later trade-in the latest high end camera or lens was good for the rest of us: It put great equipment in circulation for purchase by mere mortals.
I also learned that some of the aforementioned doctors, dentists, and their fellow travelers were pretty serious photographers.
An interesting (to me) aside was the guy I worked for was a walking talking Leica encyclopedia. There wasn't much he didn't know about those cameras, lenses, and accessories. He was Jewish and of an age that he would have been a young man during the horrors of World War II. I always found it ironic that he was so drawn to German equipment. He was a tough old bird, though, and taught this callow youth a whole bunch about the photo retail industry and all things Leica.
The Holga and the Zero 2000 pinhole cameras both are 6x6 and bring an astetic I like that I can’t get with either my 35mm or medium format kit.
Once upon the mid 1980's, I was shopping in Hunt's with my then girlfriend tagging along. I noticed a Pentax 110 SLR in the case and asked about it. Deb immediately was infatuated with the thing. I bought it, and she spent the afternoon and evening shooting it and giggling at the auto winder after every shot.
That transformed my photography in a few ways. First, it reminded me that there were lots of ways to enjoy the hobby. Second, it taught me the value of having a "fast and light" system for the times my "real" cameras were as much a burden as a useful tool.
说实话,我从小就开始玩胶片,很长一段时间我一直在用PS相机(傻瓜相机),我觉得很方便。但是当我接触到富士的gw690时,我意识到了手动胶片的美妙之处。我开始尝试很多手动胶片相机,这给了我比PS相机更好的体验,并且变得非常艺术化。
I had your posts translated so I could understand them. I hope you don't mind.:现在,我最常使用的相机是富士GX680iii和基辅60。它们都很笨重,但在我的身上看起来很酷。
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