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Out-of-date equipment, anyone?

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I like manual 35mm SLRs, No autofocus, no multi-mode matrix metering, no multi-function LCD screens and it must have a thumb advance lever or it just doesn't look right. In other words, I like to actually participate in the photographic process rather than just pointing the camera and letting it make all the decisions.
Needless to say, I don't own a camera that has been in production in the past ten years.
 
John Bartley said:
Dianne,

This is soooo correct!! A couple of times now in threads related to environmental concerns re: photography, I've brought up the subject of "cradle to grave" costs and the level of responsibility we should bear as photography consumers - no-one seems to care much though.

cheers


It's alot more then just photography. A few days ago I caught a clip on Ed Begley [the actor]. He is so proud of his clean electric car. That's nice but no mention on how that electric power is being created.
 
Hey, Nick, to drag this thread sort of back on topic, ages ago you were skeptical about my plans to have the late Steve Grimes make an adapter to hold my 260/10 Nikkor-Q (also known as Process Nikkor) in front of a #1 for use on my 2x3 Speed Graphic. The lens is in Woonsocket now with Steve's successors. With luck, I'll have it back by the end of June. And then I'll finally find out whether it is better than the 10.16"/9 Taylor Hobson Copying Lens I've been shooting on the Speed. Crappy old graphics arts lens on a crappy old graphic camera. What could be more obnoxious or better?

Cheers,

Dan
 
I have no use for 'auto' equipment or digital for that matter. I use a Canon FTb
and Bronica C, 70s and 60s respectively. My wife uses a Minolta SRT and
Rolleiflex Automat, 70s and 40s. She also has early Kodak boxes and Ansco
folders that don't get used. For me, taking a light reading, comparing it to my
evaluation, setting the shutter variables and composing the shot are as much of
a joy to me as the end result- the processed image. If I had to use a camera
that was not manual/mechanical/adjustable, I would pick a fixed focus and
aperture bakelite box over any electronic camera that did it all for me. I am
proud to be a Luddite and a believer in KISS- Keep It Simple, Stupid. I just
hope that film remains available for this magic light recording medium. Jim.
 
if that's the case, then use a view camera...it doesn't get much mechanically "simpler" or purer than that....
 
This is a dead thread, that hasn't had any posts for sixteen years.
 
My film equipement
  • 1964 Topcon Super D
  • 1971 Olympus M-1
  • 1978 Olympus OM-1n
  • 1992 Bronica ETRSi
  • 1993 Horsement LX 4x5 monorail
My digital equipment
  • 2005 Canon 5D
  • 2007 Canon 40D
  • 2012 Canon Powershot S110
  • 2014 Canon 7DII
I have no true 'need' for anything newer. Mirrorless essentially does 'the same thing' with some newer doohickeys I never found I needed. If the price drops on the used market, I might think about it, but I would be forced into the Adobe until-death subscription model, where my current Lightoom 6 is paid for and works just fine. (I know, convert RAW to DNG. to avoid upgrade..one more bother!). Yes, I am outdated but how does that hurt me?! The dollar loss in depreciation is greater with newer stuff!
It is an old thread, but the question does not get outdated!
 
This is a dead thread, that hasn't had any posts for sixteen years.
thank you for finding it, it was great reading all the posts from the folks who vanished ...
to add to my post,
I updated my Dslr, to a D300. .. bought USED from a member here last year..
 
My film equipement
  • 1964 Topcon Super D
  • 1971 Olympus M-1
  • 1978 Olympus OM-1n
  • 1992 Bronica ETRSi
  • 1993 Horsement LX 4x5 monorail
My digital equipment
  • 2005 Canon 5D
  • 2007 Canon 40D
  • 2012 Canon Powershot S110
  • 2014 Canon 7DII
I have no true 'need' for anything newer. Mirrorless essentially does 'the same thing' with some newer doohickeys I never found I needed. If the price drops on the used market, I might think about it, but I would be forced into the Adobe until-death subscription model, where my current Lightoom 6 is paid for and works just fine. (I know, convert RAW to DNG. to avoid upgrade..one more bother!). Yes, I am outdated but how does that hurt me?! The dollar loss in depreciation is greater with newer stuff!
It is an old thread, but the question does not get outdated!
you-just-bumped-a-zombie-thread.jpg
 
The latest and greatest equipment at the time of this thread is now old and out-dated.
 
All my equipment is out of date. So what. It works for me.
 
My equipment is even more out-of-date now than it was in 2005!
 
My newest camera was cutting edge when this thread started. Nikon F5 was still viable in pro use. I bought it as near new in 2014 and it is barely run in. I also have an F100 and an F90x but the rest of my gear is manual focus. A brace of OM1n in black and chrome and a Nikon FM2n and also a Leica M6 in a 3 lens kit.
 
I had to look to see what I had posted. My equipment is now even older - but are 100+ year old Protar and Rapid Rectilinears really out of date?
 
It occurred to me recently that I have only out-of-date photo equipment.

Not only do I not own any of the currently fashionable camera phones or DSLR's, the only cameras I own that are still being made are a Holga and a Zero Image pinhole camera.

Oh, I have perfectly fine equipment that I use regularly--a couple of Leicas, 3 Canon EOS's(es?), a Mamiya C330 and a couple of Pentax 645's. But none of them are current models. Looking over the newer camera models, I really don't see any features I find worth the expense. The last four cameras I bought were used, discontinued models.

Other than autofocus, multi-pattern metering and various autoexposure programs, there's little to distinguish the new stuff from the cameras of 30 years ago. Since none of these features are very important to me, improvements in their performance are not attractive to me.

Okay, which of you out there must have the newest camera models and which of you are as anachronistic as I am?
the last camera ,I bought new, is now 30 yer old; the one feature I was seeking at the time was: fully manual and no batteries required! still works perfectly fine.
 
The last new camera I bought was a FPP Debonair ($20 + shipping). No-one knows when it was built... Clearly outdated but fully compatible with my enlarger. :D
 
the last camera ,I bought new, is now 30 yer old; the one feature I was seeking at the time was: fully manual and no batteries required! still works perfectly fine.

My last new camera I bought was in 2004, 17 years ago.
 
Don't mind your equipment being out of date................
I am out of date and long past my "best before date"...................:laugh:
 
Don't mind your equipment being out of date................
I am out of date and long past my "best before date"...................:laugh:

DemandingGrossHoki-size_restricted.gif
 
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