250swb
Member
Please don't misconstrue this as whining... this is an appeal to those who may have some experience with this to share some insight.
I suggest you are not connected to your camera because you are not connected to your subject, the scene, or the event. True enough some camera's can do better job's than others at different things, and refining the equipment does free the photographer up and can clear the mind. But it should be subject led, what do you want to photograph, what project do you have on the go, what gets you excited? Then choose the camera for the job. Even so, if you are excited about a subject or project you should be thinking more about that than the camera you are holding, and even if a wholly unsuitable camera, like a 4x5 at a riot, you should make the best image you can from the tools around you, the idea should override the inconvenience of a 'wrong' camera. This goes for war photographers who wished they'd had a Nikon and telephoto lens instead of a Leica and a 28mm lens, to a landscape photographer who wished he'd had his 8x10 for the 'once in a lifetime opportunity' and not his wife's P&S. In either case the photographer will still produce a great picture because they override the camera's limitations and find a way with what they have to express the situation in a photograph.
So, the answer is to make a list of projects, things to think about and hopefully get excited about with a tingle of anticipation each time you go out the door, then the best camera will come to you, it will reveal itself in that moment you say 'Doh! why didn't I think of that before?!'
Steve