Try boxers, amigo!
I don't know who is making you feel bad about your passion, but whoever it is... Ignore them.
Agree with what you're saying Frank. I've said many times while there is a continuum of seriousness levels, in the end we're all glorified hobbyists, and whatever aspect(s) of the photographic process gives each of us enjoyment, that's what counts.
I've also said I don't see any correlation between artistic talent/craft and the level of interest/disinterest in the more technical aspects of the process (from gear to chemistry). You can love owning 100 cameras, obsess over developers and films, and still either be a "serious" artist producing wonderful work, or produce nothing, or anything in between. At the other end of the spectrum, you can be dogmatic about owning one crap camera, one crap lens and using only one film, and still either be a serious artist producing wonderful work, or produce nothing, or anything in between. There is no monopoly on snobbery. It goes both ways. In the end you might be good, or you might suck, and hopefully you enjoy it either way.
Some of us like stuff. Years ago I used to work for a professional photographer who kept his Hasselblads and Nikons and their lenses piled up in a large box. They went in for service once a year whatever, and so far as I could tell he had no relationship with his camera equipment whatsoever. In the darkroom on the other hand, he was an absolute obsessive and could produce 16 x 20" prints from 35mm negatives as well as any I've ever seen, though his bread and butter was medium format with the occasional 5 x 4.Well, I remember John Sexton saying it quite succinctly, in reference to (most) photographers and our relationships with equipment and materials: "We like stuff".
I totally agree;It's not just about the final image that counts;sometimes it's about the journey and not about the destination.It's a bit weird: people into cars or motorcycles would probably appreciate artistic pictures of same. They enjoy driving, wrenching on, and looking at them. As far as tools go, I think the finest craftsmen respect their tools and are not dismissive of them. I feel the same, including cameras, and am not ashamed to admit it.
But I think there is a view among some photographers, who want to prove how serious they are, by stating that all that matters is the final resulting image, and collectors and fondlers are frowned upon. While that's a fine attitude for working commercial photographers, the majority of us on photo forums are hobbyists.
My question for you is: Why limit the enjoyment you can receive from our hobby by taking on the dour attitude of "serious" working photographers and being dismissive of those who can add to the enjoyment of a fine image, with an appreciation of our tools as objects of art in their own right, just as classic cars and motorcycles are not just means of travel from point A to B. Product photography is legitamate genre, and I get enjoyment out of creating and looking at creative/artistic Images of cameras. If you do too, don't be intimidated by the shaming culture of the too-serious photographers posing on our hobbyist forums.
At my advancing age, I am less and less worried about what others think, and simply look to maximize my enjoyment of my hobby, which by definition is "a pleasurable pastime." There are many facets of photography that make me happy, not just the final image, and I'm okay with that.
My advice to others is to lighten up and not take yourselves too seriously.
Years ago I used to work for a professional photographer who kept his Hasselblads and Nikons and their lenses piled up in a large box. ... as I could tell he had no relationship with his camera equipment whatsoever.
...
I understand the pros for whom gear was an expense, and the individual tools are/were expendable. They were able to do that from a financial standpoint. ...
I used to hate those guys!
When I was starting this "hobby", I couldn't dream of affording a Hasselblad. I used to say that I would have been afraid to use one if I had one anyway. They were too precious (to me). Things change, of course. Forty years later I can afford anything I wish (via the combination of years of earning power and prices dropping). I still don't have a Hassie, but I've got most (more) than I need. I'm still pretty protective of the gear, however.
I understand the pros for whom gear was an expense, and the individual tools are/were expendable. They were able to do that from a financial standpoint. I was not, and still don't choose to look at it that way.
YMMV
Now that lots of pictures are being taken by drones, how do you look down upon them? With another drone?
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