dreamingartemis
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- Joined
- Apr 22, 2009
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I think you would have regretted not buying it even more.
That's how I started to think when I saw the ebay listing....
I think you would have regretted not buying it even more.
I had bought a Yashica Mat 124G back in 2012 when I wanted to try out a cheap medium format camera.
After thinking long and hard (24 hours), I caved in and bought it. Now I am not sure if I had made the right choice. Surely I wouldn't need any medium format camera. Is this what they call buyer's remorse? I guess I could lessen the guilt by selling my Yashica but it would sell so little considering how low they are going on Ebay and this one I got in almost mint condition. It seemed a shame to sell it.
I had bought a Yashica Mat 124G back in 2012 when I wanted to try out a cheap medium format camera. I figured I would stick to this as my medium format as I couldn't get anything affordable in my budget range, but recently I came across a listing on Ebay for a GF670w I had been eyeing for a long time and this time, it's within my financial capability to own.![]()
After thinking long and hard (24 hours), I caved in and bought it. Now I am not sure if I had made the right choice. Surely I wouldn't need any medium format camera. Is this what they call buyer's remorse? I guess I could lessen the guilt by selling my Yashica but it would sell so little considering how low they are going on Ebay and this one I got in almost mint condition. It seemed a shame to sell it.
My first MF was and still is my yashica mat 124g. I got it for less than 100eur and had a very stiff aperture knob. It had been smashed against the ground and the front focusing plate had been bent and was putting pressure on the knob. I repaired it myself, among a few other broken things it had, I got close up lenses for it, I put new leather on it, I put my soul on it.
And so I got my favorite prints, and shots from it. But then one day I betrayed it, ...
I decided to have the option to shoot bw and color simultaneously, so I went and spend 500eur on an ARAX 88. Heavy as small child, with a full set of zeiss lenses 100% working. And now I look back and realize that I will never like my Kiev/Arax88 as much as my yashica. I made no connection to it and the option to shoot color has not been a plus enough to justify the money spent or the sweat of carrying it around on the summer (when I usually shoot color). So yea I it is disease, but one that depends on value, not price...
At the beg. the Yashica seemed like a bad idea, because it was "defect" but It turned out to be the best deal yet (till last week, got a Sonnar 2.8 Rollei35 for 10eur in a flea-market that I also repaired, giving me that same strange connection to it. ) So here comes the difference between price and value.
What I learned, if its cheap and you repaired and use it, the gear becomes invaluable to you. If its 100% working and redundant, it just another piece of gear that you will not hesitate to sell away as soon as possible if a good offer comes by. My yashica/Rolley35S are now part of my family heritage. I will have them engraved and passed down.
Nothing wrong with the logic, but there are other ways of testing the water, including borrowing, renting or accompanying an MF shooter on an outing. MF is not intrinsically necessarily better than other formats - it rather depends on the system you choose to use. For me it comes down to what size I can and want to print in B/W, and the extra resolution on scans from 6x7. I do think there are many photographers hankering after or jumping into MF systems when they haven't come near exhausting the possibilities of 35 mm. I am not saying you are one of those, though. It is just an observation. The same logic applies when yearning for LF once one becomes bored with MF.
Warren Buffett has a quote something to the effect of: If you keep on buying things you don't need, you'll soon have to sell things you do need. Twenty years ago a friend of mine remarked that there will always be bargains (and he was right!). This has been good advice to me. I follow a few simple principles. If I wouldn't buy something for the price I can sell it for, assuming that I had the money, then I sell it because the money is worth more to me than the item. I never buy anything I can't see myself using soon. If I buy things I don't strictly need, it is never with money that I don't have, or that I need for necessary things in the foreseeable future. So really expensive unnecessary things are automatically taken care of. No matter how good it is to own a particular thing, it can never be good enough to offset the dread of enslaving yourself to creditors. And to my observation, that is one of the reasons why so many people in consumption driven cultures are so unhappy. GAS is ultimately about a pursuit of happiness, and one that isn't particularly successful in hitting its target. If anything, we just become further weighed down by all the things we own. Creative self-fulfilment is much more likely to contribute to happiness, and the tools you need to that end may be some of the best purchases you can make. As long as you know the difference between buying for the sake of owning, and buying enablers to self-fulfilment.
All that said, I hope you enjoy your new camera and the quality it can produce. Use it well, otherwise it is just an expensive keepsake and paperweight.
You have G.A.S. [Gadget Acquisition Syndrome]. The only cure it to keep buying cameras, lenses, film, tanks, chemicals, paper, and more and more and more!
You are so screwed! You are one of us now.![]()
I used to have a bad case of G.A.S. I still have a lot of my gear, but I have sold off a bit and simplified my kits around what I do actually use. One of the cameras I have that helped me see this is my Rolleiflex. The pure simplicity of a single camera with just one focal length helped me realize that chasing options was really an excuse for not making images. Options are nice, of course, but I really don't need that many, especially the way I shoot. I'm not a sports photographer, I'm not an event photographer, and I'm generally not a landscape photographer. I don't need wides or extreme teles. Using that "normal" lens on the Rollei helped me see that. Give your Yashica a chance to have that effect on you - put a couple dozen rolls through it and get to know it. I had the Rollei for maybe a year, maybe more, before I gave it a fair chance. The interface was odd compared to what I was used to (Hasselblad/RB67), the twin-lens thing felt strange, and so on. But after really taking the time to play with it, I realized how pure and straightforward a tool it is, and how it just gets out of the way of making pictures. I have the control I want with it, it makes pictures that look the way I see.
This may not happen for you with the Yashica, but you won't know until you use it. If after six months of regular shooting, it hasn't clicked with you, you can sell it on for nearly what you paid for it, and consider it a really inexpensive long-term rental. Some people love TLRs, some hate them. Some love waist-level focusing, some hate it. I found that I do love mine, and keeping things simple that way inspires me to be a better photographer.
Hopefully I'll be skilled enough to take wonderful pictures with this camera.
You don't need skill, having a better camera is all you need.
Isn't that how this works? Someone please say "yes", I'm kind of counting on it...
You don't need skill, having a better camera is all you need.
Isn't that how this works? Someone please say "yes", I'm kind of counting on it...
Well thanks to everyone for offering me their wonderful advice and the GF670w has finally arrived safe and out and works right out of the box. It feel solid,not as solid as the yashica mind you, but strong enough for my needs and not like some other flimsy medium format camera in the same weight category.
The deal was pretty good that I was worried it was a scam only when I won the bid. But the seller was genuine and given threw in 2 rolls of Velvia 100 into the package free of charge! I kinda feel guilty thinking it was a possible scam.
So I loaded a roll portra 160 and went out shooting. Hopefully I'll be skilled enough to take wonderful pictures with this camera.
So now that you've tested the camera, you're selling this camera off, right? On APug market? ;-)
Sent from Tap-a-talk
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