goros
Member
Happiness is to love what you have, not to have what you love.
Happiness is to love what you have, not to have what you love.
Too much gear costs too much to maintain in good working order and keeps you from really internalizing the operation of what you have, so you pick up a camera you haven't used in a year, and you make mistakes, or forget to set everything, or hesitate when the action of making a photograph needs to be automatic.
I own a Sony A7 too and that takes care of most of my "needs"
Perhaps I should go to up MF (if you're going to shoot film sparingly, you might as well go big, no?) and just keep a pick up an F6 or something (to use my Nikon lenses that I use on my A7)
Well, I have way to many bodies, and yet, there's a lot of lenses I would rather have, and in hindsight, wish I spent the $$$ on instead...
But bodies are so cheap! $100 here and there... Pick up a body for cheap, then grab a 50 1.4 just so I can use it- bam already spent $200
Meanwhile, that Nikon 85 1.4 AF is still waiting for me... (and I already have an F100 to put it on... yet I still WANT an F3 and an FE2)
$100??? The late model Nikon film bodies I use are more like $6 to $20!! (N55 & N75). For the price of a single new F6 I can use N55s like disposable cameras. However, N55 is a surprizing durable camera. Never a failure yet of a N55 or N75.
Even in my childhood- used F3s were $600-700 (late 90s)
I figure if Ansel Adams could take a picture of the moon, from top of his car, with no meter at all (and make a living off that one frame) I ought to be able to survive with a Photomic Meter instead of the "better" AS Meter.
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