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How do you deal with GAS?

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Sirius Glass

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How do you deal with GAS - Gadget Acquisition Syndrome?

1) Do you give in the the GAS and buy it immediately?

2) Do you think about the GAS for a while and then buy?

How do you handle a GAS attack?

I tend to do #1 and some times yield to #2.

Steve
 
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Usually I go to my local CVS, with a prescription for “DIRNI”.

Sometimes I get the generic form, (way cheaper) comes in a bottle of 60 tabs. Since its generic it’s called “Do I really Need It”.

Usually after taking two tabs, about an hour later, I come to my senses and realize “Hey, do I really need to piss more money away for something that’s likely to sit in my camera bag” Works every time… gee…and they say that aspirin is the wonder drug :D
 
Show the item to my wife. She helps me forget it.
 
I used to have problems with always wanting new equipment, but one day I realized that what I really wanted most was the cash and time to be able to get out and photograph more with the one or two cameras that I used all the time anyway. We've done a number of 'material goods' purges over the last few years and I can say that once you realize how freeing it is not to be tied to a lot of material things (that don't get used because you have too many things to use them all, or the shine wore off after a time, or whatever) appreciation for what you do have will go up and you'll feel better in general, or at least that's the way it worked out for us...

- Randy
 
Randy, I do not know ... but every time I get a new lens for my Hasselblad or in the last GAS attack a SWC and I learn to incorporate it into my capabilities I feel really great and the feeling never decreases. It is the temptation of the next possibility that causes the rise in GAS and its discomfort. that is when I wish that I was born independently wealthy instead of being so incredibly handsome!

Steve
 
The longer I photograph, the more I realize I don't need so many things to get the job done.
 
Buy a big old watermelon and eat it,practice spiting seeds into a close wastebasket.It doesn't always work, but by the time you finish swiping up the seeds off the floor from the shots ya missed the GAS attack may have passed.

Mike
 
How do you deal with GAS - Gadget Acquisition Syndrome?
First of all, it's Gear Acquisition Syndrome.

1) Do you give in the the GAS and buy it immediately?

2) Do you think about the GAS for a while and then buy?

Steve

I think about it for a while, then bid on several, and buy two. Then I see a few more that are "bargains". After a while, I discover that I need to learn to repair the bargain items so I can use them at all. Then I go buy tools and repair parts. Isn't that what everyone does?
 
I look at some Henri Cartier Bresson, or some Stephen Shore or some Walker Evans or some Andreas Gursky or some [you name the serious photographic artist] and remind myself that for art, one camera one lens is pretty much enough.

Then I go and ask my wife fersomejack. When she says, fuhgedaboudit, I load some tri-x and shoot her.
 
How do you deal with GAS - Gadget Acquisition Syndrome?

1) Do you give in the the GAS and buy it immediately?

2) Do you think about the GAS for a while and then buy?

How do you handle a GAS attack?

I tend to do #1 and some times yield to #2.

Steve



Personally, I found unemployment to work wonders :tongue:

It is, however, not recommended for everyone as staying on it long enough can and will reverse past effects of GAS. :D

Of course, once you have been infected with GAS, your chances of a relapse are very high.:wink:

To answer your question more directly, I tend to fall under #2 but at times I have been guilty of #1.

Jason
 
I look at some Henri Cartier Bresson, or some Stephen Shore or some Walker Evans or some Andreas Gursky or some [you name the serious photographic artist] and remind myself that for art, one camera one lens is pretty much enough.

Then I go and ask my wife fersomejack. When she says, fuhgedaboudit, I load some tri-x and shoot her.


That is very funny, thanks for the laugh! Next time I load up some Tri-x I will be hearing "BANG BANG" in my head

Jason
 
I look at some Henri Cartier Bresson, or some Stephen Shore or some Walker Evans or some Andreas Gursky or some [you name the serious photographic artist] and remind myself that for art, one camera one lens is pretty much enough.

Then I go and ask my wife fersomejack. When she says, fuhgedaboudit, I load some tri-x and shoot her.

Are you wearing a large bowling shirt during all this?
 
I don't understand. You seem to be insinuating that this so called GASS is a bad thing. If this is such a problem for you, perhaps you should see a shrink or something. However seeking professional help could bee very expensive. Why not buy a nice used lens instead. I bet you feel better already.
Dave
 
I did #1, until I discovered that I have everything I could possibly need and more than I can possibly use. :wink:
 
Same as Ole, except something always seems to pop up that will be the "last" acquisition.
 
As time passed (and wife says about twice a week "you DON'T NEED any other camera") I discovered that the cameras I have are really nice cameras, and that I need to use them more...

I've even sold some items so that I'm back to 2 LF lenses (was 5), 1 LF camera (I had 2), 2 TLRs (but one is for sale) and two 35mm (EOS3 is the serious one, the AE1P is my first serious camera and I can't sell it)... Makes me feel free and releases creativity.
 
I don't like to think of it as GAS. When I lust after a piece of photographic equipment, usually it is because that item will let me do something that I cannot currently do. I always lust after more than one item at one time so I tend to make a spreadsheet up and list the items that I want, the costs, and try to prioritise them, and I also try to justify the item. Seeing how much money I am looking at is usually a fairly sobering experience. I then try and save up and buy the items in the order I've decided on.
 
Sometimes it is more than just about the item, it is about the price. So it is about buying a cheap bargain or investing into an expensive one. Any purchase will always be justified.
 
Usually I research the idea to death, tracking candidates on ePrey, reading reviews, etc., until the weird vibrations pass. But every now and then I fall off the wagon. By some of the numbers I see quoted, I don't have very many cameras, and several of them are cheap toys and/or no longer functional, but I've had them since they were new. The working ones get at least occasional use.

I am still sighing over 6x9 folders but haven't quite leaped for the brass ring yet. Ha, there was a Bessa II with APO Lanthar on that evil auction site last week -- starting bid $4200. I laughed until I noticed there was a bid -- that makes the new Bessa III look like a steal! (I know they are rare, but the word 'shill' popped into what's left of my mind.)
 
I'm building a house for my son. I bought a house for my daughter. Sure as hell cured my GAS.
 
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